Tag: photos of coffee

  • Before + Now: Dorothy

    Before + Now: Dorothy

    Close-up portrait of a Burundian coffee farmer

    “We know that people who buy the coffee are interested to know where it comes from.”

    With her loveable personality and seemingly endless wisdom, Dorothy is an anchor in her community. At forty-three years old, she’s no stranger to farming coffee. Her family has been growing it since the 1970s. Farming coffee isn’t difficult, she says, but it takes diligence and hard work. 

    “Coffee is like raising a child. You have to wash them, nurture them, and look after them.” 

    The happiest moment in Dorothy’s life was when she learned that she was pregnant. Having been told by doctors that she wouldn’t be able to conceive, falling pregnant with her first daughter (and the five children that followed) was a tremendous source of joy.

    Dorothy tries to include her children in the farming process as much as she can, passing on what she’s learned from her grandmother. Growing up, Dorothy’s mom gave her to her grandmother to be raised because she had little means to do so by herself. 

    “My grandmother became the person who taught me about life and the way to live. She taught me everything I know.”

    When she goes out to work on their family’s fields, her youngest daughter tends to follow. She’s recently been teaching her children about the effects of soil erosion, and what they can do to protect the soil. Together, they are planting vegetables around their home and in the small plot of land behind their house to prevent the soil from eroding in the future.

    “What is most important though is to lead by example. If I pick up a hoe, they’ll follow and also pick up a hoe.

    Dorothy’s hope for her children is that they finish school but continue to farm, because to her, farming is life. 

    “The legacy that I would like to leave is to plant coffee trees, so that my children can look at them in the future and say, ‘My mom planted these’.”

    “I want to teach them that those coffee trees are not permanent; that they must change them when they get old, so that their children will see them in the future.” 

    Dorothy, a Burundian coffee farmer, brushing her teeth
    “I was taking photos, hour by hour, of my everyday activities. When you wake up, you wash your face and brush your teeth.”
    Dorothy, a Burundian coffee farmer, about to plant yams
    “I was going to plant yams.”
    A wooden beehive in Burundi
    “An association has helped farmers to keep bees. I was bored staying home, only doing housework. So, I thought let me go out and work with others. As a woman, if you just do housework people think you are not a very important person. I haven’t got a lot of honey…yet.”
    Two young children each holding a chicken under their arms
    “I gave my children each a chicken and one rooster to share. I gave each of my blessings a blessing. Now we will see who gets more chickens. It’s like a test of the blessings. I have to teach them how to have a small business. We don’t know. If school doesn’t go well, the children can start with an idea of what they can do in the future.”
    Dorothy, a Burundian coffee farmer, dressed for church
    “We were ready to go to church.”
    An assortment of unripe and ripe coffee cherries on a sorting table
    “I took this because of climate change. There is a disease affecting the coffee trees. The coffee cherries are not nice. Some have not ripened, others have dried out. I threw this coffee away.”

    “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.

  • Our Burundi Coffee Has Hit The Road

    Our Burundi Coffee Has Hit The Road

    Last week our small (and growing) LMCP team had some amazing victories. We have been pushing hard for many months to export our farmer’s Burundi coffee. It has been a loooooong road here in Burundi, my people. The road included acquiring 29 stamps and signatures on documents from 14 banks and governement offices. There were a few tears, I cried the first time I found out that one of our export documents needed to be typed meticulously on a very specific archaic typewriter, and that there are only two of these typewriters available in the city. No word documents… only a specific typewriter would do. What do you say to that?

    Twenty-nine stamped and signed documents later, we took some time to see our coffee through it’s final stage of being bagged in GrainPro for it’s journey across the world.

    Wasn’t this kid just 4 yesterday? I still can’t believe I have a 7 year old.The bag jumping kid is the afternoon entertainement.^Do you see him? He’s a seriously good hider.
    Burundi coffee in all it’s glory.I love warehouse light, it’s strange but true.
    A quick chat with LMCP’s new head of logistics, John. Poor Myles, by this point he’s had it because he mis-jumped. Whoops ; ) Happens to the best jumpers out there ; )Truthfully, a fancy forklift is a pretty amazing sight in Burundi.…and this Burundi coffee is outta here! Sigh. of. relief.

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