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Bolivia
Bolivia

Calama La Paz

This specific lot comes from various producers in associated with APROCAFE, which was founded back in 2000, with just 35 producers. The cooperative sought to improve revenue for producers and assisted them with organic and Fair Trade certifications in the early 2000s. The producers in this cooperative come from different parts of Caranavi, the majority being in the communities of Uchumachi and Calama, both being less than 10km apart. They have basic techniques and washing stations that support their small farms. This specific lot comes only from Calama and is comprised of the Pacamara varietal.

  • Farm Calama La Paz
  • Varietal Pacamara
  • Process Fully washed
  • Altitude 1,400 – 1,600 metres above sea level
  • Town / City Calama, Caranavi
  • Region La Paz
  • Owner Various smallholder producers
  • Farm Size Less than 5 hectares on average
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Calama La Paz

Harvest typically occurs from April – August and is done by hand once the cherries reach peak ripeness. They are delivered to each producer’s wet mill, located onsite, to be submerged in tanks of water, where floaters or underripe cherries are removed. The cherries are then de-pulped via machine and then fermented in open fermentation tanks for up to 24 hours. Afterwards, the coffee is rushed through channels of water to clean away any remaining mucilage. This is done with wooden paddles; the water being changed multiple times to ensure the coffee is completely cleaned. Producers will then disperse the coffee on raised beds in greenhouses to dry for 5 – 10 days depending on the climate.

Bolivia
About Bolivia
In Bolivia, specialty coffee is grown at an altitude of 1,200 to 2,000 metres above sea level and is primarily (90 per cent or more) centred in the Yungas and the province of Caranavi, located 3 hours northeast of La Paz. Other commercial commodity grade coffees are also grown at altitudes below 1,000 metres in the province of Santa Cruz.

In Bolivia, specialty coffee is grown at an altitude of 1,200 to 2,000 metres above sea level and is primarily (90 per cent or more) centred in the Yungas and the province of Caranavi, located 3 hours northeast of La Paz. Other commercial commodity grade coffees are also grown at altitudes below 1,000 metres in the province of Santa Cruz.

Throughout most of the 20th century, coffee production was dominated by wealthy landowners with large farms. This system was disrupted in 1991, when governmental land reform mandated that larger landowners relinquish their holdings and return lands back to the families and communities who had original ownership. The resulting mosaic of small farms (approximately 3-20 hectares in size) is now responsible for producing the majority of the country’s coffee.

Despite the multiple challenges to coffee quality – including transport, lack of technical support and processing difficulties – Bolivia has in recent years made a great deal of headway in entering specialty coffee markets. The Cup of Excellence competition arrived in 2004, at which point the Bolivian coffee community opened up to the world, a movement that was reinforced by investment from international development organisations interested in providing viable alternatives to coca production in the country. Indeed, the small-scale nature of the country’s production makes Bolivia a paradise for micro lots, and Bolivian farms are normally run and managed as family businesses where every member of the family contributes to all stages of production, thus contributing a unique quality to each farm’s production.

There are also a great number of cooperatives and associations officially linked to the Bolivian Federation of Coffee Growers and Exporters (FECAFEB) that are working to gain market access abroad.

There are indeed a number of obstacles with coffee production in Bolivia. Infrastructure alone has caused numerous struggles for coffee producers. The country boasts the world’s most dangerous road system, the infamous ‘Death Road’ that connects the Yungas coffee-growing region with the capital, La Paz. For the last 30 years, agricultural trade was transported along this road creating huge bottlenecks and numerous fatal accidents. It took 3 decades and 10 governments to build the new highway, which has been operating since 2006, by-passing to the north one of the most dangerous sections of the old ‘Death Road’. As a result, agricultural transportation and the development of the Yungas region have been massively improved. Nonetheless, the country is landlocked, and exports are typically shipped out of Peru, meaning that transport is not always straightforward.

Furthermore, the recent arrival of coffee leaf rust in the country has had severe implications for yields in a country where many farms are ‘passively’ (i.e. not certified) organically farmed. There is a fear that many farmers will return to focusing on coca, which tends to be less labour-intensive than coffee.

For the most part, coffee cherries are washed by the wet method and mostly dried on African beds (necessary due to the high altitudes and low temperatures). Depending on the distance of the farm from the nearest mill, coffee cherries may be delivered direct for processing, or the coffee may be pulped at the farm, dried, and delivered in parchment.

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