Tag: organic farming practices

  • Before + Now: Gervais

    Before + Now: Gervais

    Close-up portrait of a Burundian coffee farmer

    Gervais is a seventy-nine year old coffee farmer from the small, coffee-producing nation of Burundi, East Africa. He started farming coffee in 1960, when Burundi was just two years shy of gaining its independence from Belgian rule. As the oldest person in his community, he has dubbed himself as the “grandfather of Gaharo hill”; the area where he lives and grows his coffee. That, and the fact that his grandchildren seem to follow him wherever he goes. 

    “My house is close to the road. Children in the community often pass by my home to visit. I am also the oldest person in my community. I am like the grandfather of Gaharo hill.”

    Growing up, his father- a traditional beekeeper- taught him how to build a beehive from the wood of the umwungo tree (more commonly known as polyscias fulva, an evergreen indigenous to Burundi). Even though he never became a beekeeper himself, Gervais still grows these trees to sell the wood. 

    If you ask him, Gervais will tell you that his coffee farm is a source of pride and joy. He used to have just under 300 Heirloom Bourbon coffee trees planted on the same plot of land that his house stands on, but as he’s gotten older, he’s started giving them away to his children. As an avid member of Farmer Field School, Gervais’ coffee farm is a model that other farmers in the community can visit to learn best farming practices from him. 

    “The governor of Muramvya1 once visited my plantation during a local spraying campaign because it is so nice.”

    Over the years, he has planted banana palms, bamboo, and avocado trees alongside his coffee to diversify his farm and protect the soil. At one point, he even started a red wiggler worm farm. More recently, Gervais has started producing organic fertilizer for his coffee trees by composting banana stalks and leaves with ash leftover from cooking. 

    When we asked Gervais what he’ll do with the photos he took, he replied,

    “I am going to show my children the photos I took. I want them to remember that I worked in coffee.”

    A young child playing in a coffee tree in Burundi
    “This is my grandchild. He always comes with me to my plantation. He follows me, wherever I go. He knows that coffee is important. He knows that if we have coffee, we have rice.”
    A Burundian coffee farmer pruning his coffee trees in a formal suit
    “I was pruning my trees. I always wear my suit. When I was young, I had many suits. Now, I only have this one.”
    A Burundian woman water vegetables growing outside her father's home
    “My daughter. She was watering the vegetables outside our house.”
    A group of Burundian women sorting coffee at the Long Miles Coffee Washing Station
    “The women who were sorting coffee at the washing station. I love this washing station. It’s encouraging to see women working in coffee, looking after plantations and earning money.”

    Footnotes

    1. Muramvya is a province in the central part of the country, and also Gervais’ home province.

    “Before + Now” is dedicated to bringing the voices of marginalized coffee farmers into the field of vision of everyday coffee consumers. It includes a series of photographs made by coffee farmers in Burundi, East Africa as well as a large-format portrait of each farmer. This series makes it possible not only to see life in East Africa and the coffee process; but also to connect clearly with the dreams, fears, and hopes of coffee farmers. Read more about “Before + Now” here

  • Are organic farming practices worthwhile for Burundi coffee?

    Are organic farming practices worthwhile for Burundi coffee?

    Burundian coffee farmers standing on coffee farm

    We met Antoine standing barefoot on his farm, surrounded by coffee trees. At fifty-four years old, he’s no stranger to farming coffee. As a young boy, he helped his parents on their farm by collecting leaves for mulch and learned how to prune and stump coffee trees. Since then, there have been significant changes for coffee farmers in Burundi- not all good. ⁠⠀

    “Thirty years ago, the soil was good. Even without fertilizer or mulch, our production was enough. Now, the soil is not good. We have to work hard to find mulch and our production is low without fertilizer. We use fertilizer from the government but sometimes it comes late and when it’s late, it cannot feed the coffee trees’ roots.”⁠

    Antoine, a coffee farmer from Gaharo hill

    Back in 2011, before Long Miles was founded, the coffee farming communities that we were interested in working with were producing less than half a kilogram of coffee cherries per tree. Although it’s not the only solution to improve soil health and productivity, we quickly realized that having access to fertilizer could significantly impact farmers’ annual coffee production and income. 

    Coffee tree on Burundi coffee farm

    In Burundi, however, fertilizer is a state-controlled product that is only accessible through the national coffee board. One has to apply and pay for fertilizer in advance- something that most subsistence farmers in Burundi can’t afford to do. That first year we put down an advance on fertilizer for the communities that we were working with, but it soon became apparent that there was no guarantee it would arrive in time for the coffee season; no guarantee there would be enough for everyone who needed it. 

    “Since then, there have been significant changes for coffee farmers in Burundi- not all good.”

    By the time the fertilizer did arrive, the rainy season had just begun. Any fertilizer that was used on farmers’ land washed away with the rain, eventually running off into local water sources. It was incredibly frustrating for our team to stand by and watch this happen. Coffee farmers in Burundi have, for years, been paying for a fertilizer that is delivered too little too late to be useful. This realization was the turning point for our decision to “go organic”. By doing so, we could take control of how we address farming challenges and tackle soil health in a way that could be all-inclusive and better for the environment. 

    Step onto a coffee farm in Burundi and you may take note that coffee farmers are already using organic practices: homemade compost made from leftover coffee cherry skins and animal waste is fed to the soil, stacks of grass and leaves are collected by hand and placed as mulch around farmers’ crops. These commonly found ‘organic practices’ are not always done by choice, but because of farmers’ limited access to farming inputs.

    Burundian coffee farmer picking coffee cherries

    According to the World Bank, eighty percent of Burundi’s 11.6 million population is employed by the agriculture sector (World Bank, 2020). 600,000 of those 11.6 million households are coffee farmers, which means that one in twenty people depend on coffee in Burundi (African Fine Coffees Association, 2020). 

    “…one in twenty people depend on coffee in Burundi.”

    What would an intentional shift towards organic farming look like in Burundi? Some might argue that not much will change. With limited access to fertilizer, insecticides, and pesticides, smallholder coffee farmers will continue using natural resources and finding innovative ways to source the inputs that they need. On the other hand, a farmer’s cost of production may increase with no guarantee that the practice will pay off; a risk that coffee farmers need to ensure they can afford to take. 

    As coffee producers, we also need to turn our attention to the policies at the country-level. There is currently an ‘agricultural intensification policy’ that is focused on increasing the country’s crop and food production. The government’s expectations of this policy coupled with smallholder farmers’ ability to source the necessary farming inputs may limit their ability to shift towards organic farming practices. 

    “What would an intentional shift towards organic farming look like in Burundi?”

    Is it worth the risk? An organic certification wouldn’t change the quality of the coffee we produce, and it wouldn’t necessarily mean that coffee can be sold at higher prices. The average Burundian coffee producer might get paid more if they sell their coffee on the commodity market, but we’re not producing commodity coffee; we’re producing specialty coffee. As Epaphras Ndikumana, our Social & Environmental Impact Leader points out, “Most of the coffee produced in Burundi is sold as commodity coffee so whenever there’s potential to scale up a coffee farmer’s profit, it is worth it.”

    “Long Miles is not necessarily going to recoup the cost that it takes to get a certification- that’s not the motivating factor. The motivation behind our pursuit of organic farming is so that future generations of coffee farmers in Burundi can farm coffee sustainably.”

    Ben Carlson, co-founder of Long Miles Coffee.

    We’ve recently heard from coffee producers in Honduras, Brazil, and Colombia that shifting to organic farming is yet to pay off for coffee farmers. Knowing that the transition to organic can take years, if not decades, is it worthwhile considering “going organic” in Burundi?

    “If you’re talking about one farmer? Yes. If you’re talking about thousands of coffee farming families who haven’t officially farmed organically before? Again, yes, but it’s a long-term investment.”

    Getting all 5,500 coffee farmers that we work with within Burundi certified would be incredibly costly and would require a significant amount of inputs. Even then, it would be hard to control every person’s activities to make sure that their actions maintain the integrity of the organic certification. 

    “For us, it’s not about the certificate; it’s about farmers having the inputs and knowledge to farm organically themselves. It’s worthwhile pursuing if we want to work in other coffee-growing regions, which we do. Long Miles will be producing coffee at a Kenyan washing station this year. We are also starting an organic coffee farm in Kenya, and would like to start one in Uganda too.” 

    Burndian woman holding coffee cup and spoon

    As coffee producers, we can see the value of shifting to organic farming practices, but is buying and drinking organic coffee important to end-consumers?

    “From my experience as a high-end specialty coffee roaster and retailer, organic certification matters to the consumer but not enough to make decisions based on the organic certification. I would classify it as a value add, a bonus to drinking delicious coffee which seems to be the higher priority. While certifications clearly matter to a percentage of consumers it does not seem to be the main driver for customers outside of higher priorities like flavor, origin, price, location of the retailer.”

    Oliver Stormshak, co-owner, CEO and Green Coffee Buyer of Olympia Coffee

    Our transition towards organic farming is moving at a slower pace than a certification calls for. We’re listening to and learning from the communities of coffee farming families that we work with, along with coffee producers in other nations who have gone before us to determine the feasibility of producing organic coffee. Long Miles’ pursuit of organic farming is a long-term commitment to empowering future generations of coffee farmers with the knowledge and inputs that they need to produce coffee sustainably. With Burundi as our base, we’ll be able to take what we’ve learned to start producing organic coffee in other parts of East Africa too. 

    References

    African Fine Coffee Association (AFCA). (2020). AFCA Chapters: Burundi. [online]. Available at: https://afca.coffee/portfolio-item/burundi/. [Accessed 26 October 2020].

    World Bank. (2020). The World Bank in Burundi: Overview. [online]. Available at: https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/burundi/overview. [Accessed 26 October 2020].

  • LONG MILES COFFEE PODCAST: COLOMBIAN COFFEE WITH FELIPE SARDI

    LONG MILES COFFEE PODCAST: COLOMBIAN COFFEE WITH FELIPE SARDI

    A Colombian specialty coffee producer
    Image from Felipe Sardi. Cover art by Abby Fabre.

    EPISODE FOUR

    Felipe Sardi (La Palma y El Tucán) wasn’t always a coffee producer and exporter. We dig into the early years of failure preluding La Palma as it is today, and what the tipping point was for Felipe and Elisa (co-founder of La Palma). Felipe talks to us about how organic farming practices haven’t paid off for Colombian coffee farmers, and why the specialty coffee industry should be pushing the limits to become more sustainable.  

    SHOW NOTES

    Felipe mentions Elisa Madriñan, the co-founder of La Palma y El Tucán

    Ben makes mention of Kristy Carlson, the co-founder and Chief Storyteller of Long Miles Coffee.  

    Ben talks about the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) and the SCA Expo.  

    Learn more about La Palma’s Neighbors & Crops program here.  

    Felipe speaks about Delagua Coffee Project in Northern Colombia, Creativa Coffee District in Panama and Equation Coffee.  

    Check out the beautiful wooden cabins at La Palma’s Boutique Hotel here.  

    Read the letter that La Palma wrote about COVID-19 and its effect on Colombian coffee production here.  

    Learn more about the project Biodiversal 

    Abby talks about terroir. Here’s a helpful resource to help unpack this term. 

    Want to find a bag of La Palma y El Tucán coffee? Check out this link here

    Want to get in touch with Felipe?

    Visit La Palma y El Tucán’s website.

    Email felipe@lapalmayeltucan.com or info@lapalmayeltucan.com

    Follow @lapalmayeltucan on Instagram.

    Follow @felipesardi_ari on Instagram.

    SHOW CREDITS

    Hosts: Ben Carlson and Abby Fabre

    Producer: Tommy Fabre

    Executive Producer: Robyn-Leigh van Laren

    Cover art: Abby Fabre

    Imagery: Felipe Sardi

  • Long Miles Coffee Podcast: Brazilian Coffee with Felipe Croce

    Long Miles Coffee Podcast: Brazilian Coffee with Felipe Croce

    Image from Felipe Croce. Covert art by Abby Fabre.

    EPISODE THREE

    Felipe Croce (Fazenda Ambiental Fortaleza) grew up on his family’s coffee farm in Brazil. We talk to Felipe about the complexities of organic coffee farming, the misconceptions of Brazilian coffee, how shifting to organic practices hasn’t paid off for Brazilian coffee farmers yet, and what he’s doing to bring the farm to roasting partners in the face of the global pandemic.

    SHOW NOTES

    Ben makes mention of three specialty coffee roasters: Oddly CorrectBlue Bottle and Passenger Coffee.

    Read more about the Croce family’s history with coffee and Fazenda Ambiental Fortaleza here.  

    This is the reference Ben made about organic farms being “messy”.

    Felipe makes mention of the late Erna Knutsen, coffee’s feminist pioneer. Read more about Erna here

    Felipe mentions three specialty coffee roasters: Stumptown, Intelligentsia and Counter Culture Coffee.

    Visit VIF Wine bar in Seattle.

    SCAE is the Specialty Coffee Association Expo

    Here’s a helpful resource on what terroir is and how it relates to your cup of coffee.

    Here are a few places where you can find a bag of FAF Brazil coffees in North America: 

    Linea Caffe – West Coast

    Blue Bottle – West Coast

    1000 Faces Coffee – Southeast

    City of Saints – East Coast

    Want to get in contact with Felipe? 

    Visit FAF’s website  

    Follow @fafcoffees and @felipecroce on Instagram 

    Send an email to felipecroce@fafcoffees.com 

    SHOW CREDITS

    Hosts: Ben Carlson and Abby Fabre

    Producer: Tommy Fabre

    Executive Producer: Robyn-Leigh van Laren

    Cover art: Abby Fabre

    Imagery: Felipe Croce

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