Archive for February, 2010

Feb 19 2010

New Faces: Peruvian Farmer Dario Roman Tells His Story

Published by wynne under Farmer Training,South America

Dario Ramon became the leader of the APESI coffee cooperative in San Ignacio, Peru through perserverance and dedication

Dario Ramon became the leader of the APESI coffee cooperative in San Ignacio, Peru through perserverance and dedication

About a year ago, Sustainable Harvest’s Oscar Gonzales was teaching men and women in San Ignacio, Peru how to cup coffee to evaluate its quality. Sustainable Harvest had assembled almost thirty cuppers from our suppliers in Peru and Ecuador for three days of intense training. As Oscar began the first day, a middle-aged man he didn’t know entered the room. The man pulled up a plastic chair, and, listening intently, began taking careful notes.

Later that morning, the man, with salt and pepper gray hair and a wide smile, introduced himself as Dario Roman. He asked Oscar if he could stay for the day of training. While there was no extra equipment at the training center, Oscar lent Dario a spoon with which to cup, and Angel from our staff lent him an apron to protect his shirt from splashes of coffee.

On the third day of the training course, Dario and Oscar finally sat down to talk about the coffee that Dario’s cooperative, APESI, produces. Dario wanted Sustainable Harvest’s help to sell his beans, and Oscar wanted to know more about the man who had traveled so far to participate so attentively in the training. Over lunch, Dario told Oscar the story of how he came to be the leader of APESI.

“I come from the mountains of Piura, in the north of Peru. The only thing I knew was farming,” he began. Dario married as a young man, had three children, and farmed to support his family. But things went badly: his land was not producing well and his wife died very young. Lacking an income and grieving for his wife, Dario struggled to raise his three children.

Eventually, Dario married again and moved to the town of San Ignacio, where it is said that anything can grow because of the good climate and healthy soils. There, Dario met farmers who taught him to grow a tuber called yacón. When the harvest came, Dario found he could not sell it because the market was flooded with yacón and competition was fierce. The next season, Dario planted peanuts, maintaining faith that he could succeed in San Ignacio. Dario suffered later that year as he watched a plague of ants eat his peanut crop. He wondered if he was destined to fail, but the obligation he felt to his children and his wife made him push on. Dario was desperate; yet he could not give up because he had to feed his growing family. He chose to believe that something good was just around the corner.

Dario and the APESI cooperative grow their coffee in the fertile hills of San Ignacio, Peru

Dario and the APESI cooperative grow their coffee in the fertile hills of San Ignacio, Peru

Dario had heard other San Ignacio farmers talk about the income they earned from growing coffee. He organized a group of his friends, and they planted coffee on their land. With dedication and effort, they learned to produce a high quality coffee. After Dario’s experience growing a crop he was not able to sell, he led his cooperative in the search for reliable, consistent markets for their coffee. He had heard from other cooperatives in San Ignacio that Sustainable Harvest would be providing a training in coffee quality.

“The training course was an opportunity I could not miss,” Dario told Oscar. He wanted to meet the staff of Sustainable Harvest. And so he arrived at the cupping training course as an eager but unknown student that first day.

One month after first meeting the team from Sustainable Harvest in San Ignacio, Dario visited our office in Lima. He traveled far to discuss the quality of APESI’s coffee and find out about the possibilities to sell APESI’s coffee through Sustainable Harvest this coming year. After cupping APESI’s coffee and witnessing Dario’s determination, Sustainable Harvest will work with APESI this year to help them develop a long-term relationship with a buyer for their coffee.

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Feb 12 2010

Climate Change in Latin America

Honey coffee drying at Las Lajas farm

Honey coffee drying at Las Lajas farm

In coffee growing regions throughout the world, the effects of climate change are beginning to threaten farmers’ livelihoods established through generations of hard work. In many countries, producers are taking note and seeking ways to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change.

In Colombia, severe weather over the past few years has resulted in the lowest coffee yield in more than three decades. Warming weather contributed to heavier rainfall during the wet season, causing the growth of leaf rust on coffee plants and worsening beetle infestations. As climate change continues, Colombian coffee farmers are faced with difficult choices in the years ahead: expensive preventative measures may raise coffee prices but switching to hardier varieties can decrease cup quality. The farmers’ decisions will affect the global coffee market.

In Costa Rica, Sustainable Harvest’s supplier partners face similar challenges as a result of climate change. Coffee farmer Minor Corrales, a member of the AFAORCA farmers’ association in Tarrazú, has seen the regular patterns of rain and sun that his father and grandfather relied on for decades replaced by more unpredictable and extreme weather. The region experienced unusually warm weather last December and January, resulting in an earlier harvest as cherries ripened faster than normal. North of San José, the family-owned farm Las Lajas sells a sun-dried honey coffee that is increasingly difficult to produce as periods of sunlight become less predictable and consistent.

Across coffee growing regions of Latin America, the timing of planting, harvest, and drying carefully honed over generations to produce the best yield and quality for each unique micro-climate may no longer be applicable. Although many farmers have so far been able to adapt to minor deviations from normal temperature and rainfall patterns, the increasing pace of such changes will make it more difficult to adjust in the future.

Harvesting shade-grown coffee

Harvesting shade-grown coffee

Sustainable Harvest is working with farmers and other stakeholders to identify ways to reduce the impact of climate change on coffee growing communities. In unforested areas, one possible approach is to plant shade trees over coffee plants to reduce local temperature variations. Both environmental and economic measures are necessary. By establishing transparent market linkages, providing training in quality, and assisting with organic or Fair Trade certifications that bring higher prices, Sustainable Harvest also helps ensure that farmers have the income security to survive a poor harvest. We’re also helping farmers in Central America diversify their farms with special attention to improving their families’ food security. That way, even if the coffee yield is lower in a given year, farmers will still be able to adequately feed their families. Although climate change poses significant challenges to coffee farming communities, we hope to reduce those risks through collaborative efforts to find, introduce, and support innovative approaches in Latin America and worldwide.

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Feb 01 2010

Snapshots from Mexico: Emerging Women Leaders

Clemente Santiago Paz, Sustainable Harvest’s staff agronomist in Mexico, recently returned from visiting our supplier partners located throughout southern Mexico. While on the road, Clemente received first-hand updates from the farmers, who are busy harvesting their coffee. Clemente was especially struck by the participation of women in the cooperatives he visited — this year, several women have been newly elected or appointed to leadership positions. Increasingly, women are beginning to fill roles in cooperatives that were previously held by men. As the Mexico harvest goes into full swing, we would like to introduce a few of the women working behind the scenes to bring us high quality coffee from Mexico:

Señora Francisca García Rivera

Señora Francisca García Rivera

Francisca García Rivera

This past October, Francisca García Rivera became a member of the directors council for the Huatusco Cooperative; she is the first women ever to have this position. Huatusco members recently elected a new board of directors, and the President made it a priority to appoint Rivera to the director’s council soon after taking his new post. Rivera owns 2.5 hectares of land in the coffee-producing region of Quapol, Veracruz, Mexico, and comes from a family of coffee producers.

Señora Mirsa Indira Roblero Ramirez

Señora Mirsa Indira Roblero Ramirez

Mirsa Indira Roblero Ramirez

At the Cooperative Triunfo Verde in the state of Chiapas, Mexico, Mirsa Indira Roblero Ramirez was recently elected by members of her community to be their  representative. The first woman representative ever to be elected at Triunfo Verde, Ramirez is in charge of coordinating the work of 29 co-op members, supporting the co-op as it completes its organic inspections, and coordinating the work of the cooperative’s 30,000-plant nursery.

Señora Silvia Roblero Torres

Señora Silvia Roblero Torres

Silvia Roblero Torres

When Silvia Roblero Torres began working at CESMACH cooperative in southern Chiapas, Mexico, in 2003, she was the first woman to ever work there. She quickly proved herself just as capable as the male staff, and now works as an agronomist and internal control officer for the cooperative. She is also in the process of becoming a certified organic inspector. Silvia has taken a particular interest in supporting the women farmers who are part of the cooperative. She helped them organize themselves into groups and offers the women’s groups training and support to develop skills that can help them increase their incomes.


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