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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet鈥攎uch less a business鈥攊t is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon鈥檚 Letter

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Lucas Isakowitz  /  Jan 11, 2023  /  16 Min Read  /  Mountain Biking

Descending through Colombia鈥檚 coffee country, a crew of mountain bikers explores how climate change is impacting one of the world鈥檚 most cherished beverages and the lives of those who depend upon it.

Scientist Emil茅 Zynobia zips through a golden sea of coffee crops and banana trees after winding through colorfully painted neighborhoods in Manizales, Colombia.

Photos by Sofia Jaramillo

Wait. Don鈥檛 read this story yet. Instead, go make a cup of coffee. Brew it however you want. Have it black, or with sugar, cream or panela. Think about where it came from: a bush the size of a refrigerator, with green leaves and marble-sized oval fruits that turn red as they ripen. Picture the hands it passed through: on the farm, at the processing plant, at the roaster. Take a deep breath, then a sip.

Now, let鈥檚 begin.听

欧博会员入口鈥檙e late, but Don Ramiro Ceballos still greets us with a smile of piano-key teeth as we shuffle into plastic chairs arranged around a small table. 鈥淐ome in, come in!鈥� he says, pointing to a jug of sugar water on the table. 鈥溑凡┗嵩比肟� have aguapanela with lemon and some pasteles for you.鈥�

Our bikes are lined up against the white wall of Ramiro鈥檚 house in Manizales, Colombia, caked in mud like a band of tired mechanical horses. 欧博会员入口 had just ridden (or in my case tumbled) down a trail known as La Garrucha, which is categorically not a mountain biking trail. It鈥檚 a path used by coffee pickers, sometimes with horses, to climb and scrape their way up the mountain鈥攏arrow, steep, rutted out and surrounded on all sides by thick green jungle.

After we鈥檙e settled, Ramiro gestures at the rows of head-high bushes outside. 鈥溑凡┗嵩比肟� came here 20 years ago because the land is so healthy, so productive,鈥� he says, referring to his modest 7-acre property spread across the steep hillside. This season, however, has been difficult; too much rain brought more pests and rot, and made the harvest schedule hard to predict. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 much we can do when it comes to bad weather, except ask El 厂别帽辞谤 to turn down the faucet a bit.鈥�

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Wax palms spot the steep hillsides and farms outside of Manizales. The tree鈥攃apable of reaching heights of up to 200 feet鈥攊s the world鈥檚 tallest palm and Colombia鈥檚 national tree, just one of the many unique species inhabiting the region鈥檚 precipitious high-elevation jungles.

Ramiro is one of more than 500,000 smallholder Colombian coffee farmers, known as cafeteros, that collectively grow nearly 10 percent of the world鈥檚 coffee. For nearly 200 years, coffee has meant jobs, schools, roads, safety and a source of pride for the people of this region. Now, a hotter and wetter climate is threatening the delicate balance of sun and rain that coffee plants need to flourish, putting Colombia鈥檚 cafeteros at risk.

Coffee is what brought the five of us鈥攑hotographer Sofia Jaramillo, scientist-turned-athlete Emil茅 Zynobia, snowboarder and coffee entrepreneur Alex Yoder, filmmaker Jr Rodriguez and myself鈥攖o the country. Inspired by Sofia鈥檚 deep roots in the coffee trade, we鈥檇 decided to use mountain bikes to explore one of the Colombia鈥檚 defining industries, descending from the Andean alpine through the steep green hills of coffee country on dirt roads and singletrack. 欧博会员入口鈥檇 end at Maracaibo, Sofia鈥檚 family鈥檚 cattle ranch, and along the way we鈥檇 talk to farmers like Ramiro and learn how climate change is impacting the region鈥檚 way of life.

鈥淥ther provinces had cocaine,鈥� Don Jaime Eduardo Gutierrez, a coffee farmer from Manizales, had told us a few days earlier. 鈥淏ut not us. 欧博会员入口鈥檙e proud that we looked to coffee for our existence.鈥�

After one sip, we can tell Ramiro鈥檚 coffee is good鈥攅nough that Alex, who owns , asks to buy a kilo of unroasted beans to take back to the US. Ramiro is crestfallen; he doesn鈥檛 have any unroasted beans at the moment, he explains, but will try to get us a bag before we leave.

Ramiro鈥檚 10-year-old son, however, has an alternative. 鈥溑凡┗嵩比肟� also sell guinea pigs!鈥� he chirps, popping out from behind the door. 鈥淒o you want to buy one?鈥�

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Historically, coffee farmers in Colombia harvest their crop twice a year, but erratic rain patterns have forced some to harvest through the entire year, picking berries as they ripen鈥攎eaning a single plant may have a mix of both green and red berries. Pedro Nicol谩s Valencia Garcia harvests a spectrum of color at Finca Portugal, a coffee farm outside of Manizales.

Our path to Ramiro鈥檚 farm began a few days earlier, along a dirt road some 13,000 feet above sea level, led by the descendant of coffee royalty. Sofia鈥檚 family has been involved in Colombian coffee since its beginnings: One of her great-great grandfathers, Antonio Pinz贸n, is credited with starting the first coffee farm in the Caldas region in 1878; his son, Carlos鈥攌nown as 鈥渢he King of Coffee鈥濃攊s credited with growing the Colombian coffee industry to international renown; and one of her other great-grandfathers, Pedro Uribe Mej铆a, helped start the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia, a 95-year-old nonprofit that promotes coffee production, among other services, both within the country and around the world. With the recent passing of her abuela, Sofia felt it was time to explore these roots.

Though not as foundational, our choice of transport is also deeply embedded in Colombian culture. Cycling is one of the country鈥檚 most popular sports鈥攁n abundance of steep roads and grueling, high-elevation climbs have bred world-class road racers for decades, including 2019 Tour de France champion Egan Bernal, one of the youngest to win the title in the race鈥檚 history. The Coffee Triangle鈥檚 extensive network of gravel roads and agricultural paths, some of which wind up into the Andean alpine, have also made it an increasingly popular destination for bike touring and, more recently, mountain biking.

It was this combination of bikes and coffee that brought us to the vast and rugged Andean p谩ramo region, at the highest reaches of Colombian coffee country.

鈥淭his is where it all starts,鈥� explained, our guide for the trip. 鈥淭he volcanic soil of the p谩ramo is what makes the lower coffee lands so productive.鈥�

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Alex Yoder, Lucas Isakowitz and Emil茅 (from left to right) ride past a waterfall just outside of Los Nevados National Park. Draped across some of the highest peaks of the Colombian Andes, the 144,000-acre park encompasses three of the country鈥檚 six remaining glaciers, numerous high-elevation wetlands and forests, and a variety of p谩ramo ecosystems, all of which are a crucial source of water for the coffee farms, villages and cities below.

The p谩ramo ecosystem is a high-altitude bog, found only in the Andean alpine of a few South American countries. The vegetation here serves as a giant sponge, storing rainwater and ice-melt in the soil, releasing it slowly and steadily throughout both wet and dry seasons, and making the p谩ramo a vast reservoir that provides water for millions of Colombians鈥攐ver 70 percent of the country鈥檚 population.

They鈥檙e also wildly biodiverse鈥攐ver 80 percent of the plant species are endemic鈥攁nd considered the world鈥檚 fastest evolving ecosystem. As we rode through this waterlogged system via dirt and gravel roads that curved around the mountain like a serpent, we passed through thickets of one such species that thrives in the p谩ramos鈥� glacial and volcanic soils: frailejones, a towering plant with thick, water-filled trunks and tufts of green leaves and woolen flowers emerging from their heavy heads.

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Despite their spikey appearance, frailejones actually belong to the same family as sunflowers and daisies, and many sport yellow, red or white flowers for much of the summer. They also grow exclusively in Andean p谩ramos, creating an otherworldly alpine landscape for Lucas (left) and Alex (right).

Soon we left the frailejones and entered the jungle, riding under a canopy of leaves big enough to wrap up a mountain biker like a burrito. Hummingbirds flitted through the air, blue and orange and green and brown, as small as plums and as large as grapefruits. The p谩ramo and surrounding jungle systems are biodiversity hotspots within what is already, by area, the most biodiverse country in the world. More than 56,000 species of plants and animals鈥攊ncluding over 1,800 bird species鈥攍ive in Colombia and make up close to 10 percent of the planet鈥檚 biodiversity. The p谩ramos, with their carbon-rich soil, can also serve as buffers against climate change.

Yet these ecosystems are increasingly at risk. Animal agriculture is replacing natural systems at all elevations, including both the p谩ramo and the once-extensive forest of towering wax palms. Gold, coal and other minerals are attracting mining companies to the p谩ramo, and global temperatures are rising beyond even what such a rich and resilient ecosystem can handle.

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Alex, Emil茅 and Lucas (left to right) pass the remains of a mudslide on a road outside of Manizales. Such slides are becoming increasingly common on the region鈥檚 dirt roads, as climate change intensifies extreme rainstorms that oversaturate the steep hillsides.

Climate change is also altering the country鈥檚 weather patterns, increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall events and droughts. 欧博会员入口 saw the impact that too much water can have on this steep terrain as we descended, where a massive mudslide had chewed through part of the mountain and left car-sized boulders in the middle of the road. Our guide Juan said that this year, it had rained double what it normally does in the Caldas province. A few days later, a cafetero would tell us the harvest is now year-round rather than twice a year鈥攖he wet and dry periods are so mixed up, the cherries are ripening off schedule.

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Most of the trails around Manizales were made for workers traveling between banana plantations and coffee farms, and mountain bikers like Emil茅 often find riding the narrow, leaf-covered paths to be difficult 鈥� or, in some cases, terrifying.

None of this seemed to bother the little girl we rode past in the next village, who looked at Sofia and Emil茅 with wide eyes. 鈥�Mira, mira!鈥� she yelled. 鈥淭hose girls are riding big bikes!鈥� The girl鈥檚 friend came out to watch Sofia and Emil茅 ride by, smiles emblazoned across their faces 鈥� until some dogs came rushing from behind a fence, barking and snapping at our ankles.

After descending over 8,000 feet, we were finally in the heart of coffee country.

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Emil茅 (front), Sim贸n Arias Lasso (center) and the author (rear) emerge onto a dirt two-track after riding through a neighborhood just outside of Manizales. Sim贸n is a co-founder of Trail Hunters, a Manizales-based tour company, and was our co-guide through the lower reaches of Colombia鈥檚 coffee country.

Jeferson Gonzales spends his days waging war against a bug the size of a pinhead: the coffee berry borer, an invasive species that first appeared in Colombia in the late 1980s. The 22-year-old Venezuelan works his way through the Hacienda Venecia coffee farm鈥檚 nearly 400 acres, one plant at a time, using a knife to cut open individual cherries to check if they鈥檙e infected.

鈥淪ee, here is one,鈥� he says, holding up a cherry with a rotted-out bean, and picks out a little black speck. This information helps Hacienda Venecia decide where and when to fumigate with pesticides, the method most commonly used by conventional farmers to control the coffee berry borer.

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Jeferson Gonzales moved to Colombia from Venezuela in 2018, and now spends his days checking coffee plants for the invasive coffee berry borer. Jeferson makes as much in one day here as he would in two weeks in Venezuela and sends much of what he earns back to his family. 鈥淚 want to see my parents, my little brothers and sister, but if I go to Venezuela, who will help them? I am the oldest son and so they have my help.鈥�

Jeferson speaks of cultivating healthy coffee plants with a fluency that hides his newness to coffee farming. He and his wife emigrated to Colombia from Venezuela in 2018, leaving behind his parents and younger siblings. He has been working here ever since.

鈥淏ack in Venezuela we drink coffee, but I didn鈥檛 know anything about growing coffee or being a cafetero,鈥� he says. 鈥淣ow that I鈥檝e been here for four years, coffee has become a huge part of my existence.鈥�

This is perhaps coffee鈥檚 greatest contribution to the region: employment. About 500,000 Colombian campesinos make their living growing coffee, and 95 percent of Colombia鈥檚 coffee farms are smaller than 12 acres. Include those who transport, roast, market and export that coffee and the number of people supported by the crop grows even larger. Hacienda Venecia employs 50 people year-round to care for the plants and about 400 people during harvest season.

鈥淲hat coffee means is lots of work,鈥� says Pedro Nicol谩s Valencia Garcia, a coffee picker we talked to at a nearby farm. 鈥淐offee gives campesinos the ability to make a living picking coffee.鈥�

In this context, Jeferson鈥檚 battle against the coffee berry borer grows in significance. The tiny insect is considered the most harmful pest in most coffee-producing countries. It can feed exclusively on coffee beans and, if left uncontrolled, could wipe out an entire region鈥檚 crops.

Climate change is anticipated to make the situation worse. As temperatures warm, the beetle鈥檚 habitat extends to higher elevations. Coffee used to grow anywhere above 2,900 feet, but as heat and pests have moved upward, farms below 3,600 feet are becoming harder to find. One study suggests that, with an increase of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit, farmers will have to move about 550 feet higher to maintain their current level of productivity and quality. The slow upward migration can leave smaller farms and farmers behind.

鈥淭he farmers you really want to talk to, they鈥檙e gone,鈥� Don Jaime Eduardo Gutierrez told us on the first day of our trip, explaining how lower elevation farms have shifted out of production.

Still, an abundance of high-elevation and volcanic soils means that Colombia will continue to produce coffee, even in a hotter world鈥攊f farmers can find a way to prepare against coming changes and still make a living in a tough industry.

For Don Ramiro Ceballos, climate change is a threat insomuch as it impacts his ability to pay the bills. His farm produces around 1,650 pounds of coffee annually, which鈥攄epending on the wholesale price of coffee鈥攂rings in between $2,000 and $3,000 USD. 鈥淚 worry about too much rain, but my greatest worry is about finding good farmhands, good workers and, of course, the price of coffee,鈥� he told us when we visited his farm. 鈥淎t the end of the day, coffee means work and money for us.鈥�

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As the capital of the Department of Caldas, Manizales is in the heart of Colombia鈥檚 coffee-growing region, a bustling city of some 430,000 people that鈥檚 surrounded by steep farms, thick jungle and an increasingly well-known trail system. Photo: Sofia Jaramillo

A few decades ago, a handful of ambitious cyclists realized the steep hillsides around Manizales, so ideal for coffee, 辫濒谩迟补苍辞 and avocado farming, could also prove ideal for mountain biking: so ideal, in fact, that the nearby trails and agricultural paths have since hosted numerous national championships and produced South America鈥檚 most decorated downhiller racer, Marcelo Gutierrez. In 2018, the city even hosted a stop of the Enduro World Series, an event that kicked off with a high-speed urban descent through Manizales streets and back alleys.

Manizales鈥� trails have also birthed numerous mountain bike tour companies (such as听Kumanday Adventures, which our guideco-founded) which lead customers on rides around the city and along the steep dirt roads linking remote areas of the mountains. These days, enough cyclists pass through the remote villages and fincas, many inaccessible by car, that locals have started catering to them. 鈥淚 call this entire thing the new bicycle economy,鈥� says, our co-guide through the lower coffee regions. 鈥淧eople create stands on weekends to sell orange juice, lunch and coffee.鈥�

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An old sign emerges from the flora of a sugarcane plantation, evidence of a mountain bike race held in the area years before. These days the trail is mostly frequented by campesinos, and occasionally by mountain bikers looking for a wild ride. Photo: Sofia Jaramillo

欧博会员入口 stopped for a quick coffee and some bocadillo de guayaba鈥攅nergy chews made of guava paste鈥攁t a roadside shop in the village of Neira, then pedaled through a residential area until we found a turnoff that went straight down. These steep dirt tracks serve as transportation veins between farms and villages, so it wasn鈥檛 surprising to find this one blocked by two horses.

鈥淛ust don鈥檛 ride too close and you鈥檒l be OK,鈥� Sim贸n told us as we wove past the horses, who seemed wholly unbothered by our presence.

The trail quickly narrowed into singletrack, split by a big rut from the recent rains, before crossing into a mix of coffee and sugarcane plantations. As we entered the sugarcane fields, we heard a distant, rhythmic boom, hiss, clack. Without warning, an invasion of dogs darted out from the brush, yapping, yipping and nipping at our ankles. 欧博会员入口 yelled and growled, trying to keep our legs high and out of danger as we pedaled away.

The boom, hiss, clack grew in volume as we moved deeper into the sugarcane, until we finally came to its source. Inside two modest concrete buildings, a group of men were making panela, a type of unrefined sugar made from boiled sugarcane juice that鈥檚 often used to sweeten coffee in Colombia.

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Making panela is hard work, as the crew discovered when they stumbled on a small production facility in the middle of a sugarcane field. Colombians consume enough panela to support 20,000 similar operations across the country; the owner of this one, Don Oscar, has been practicing the trade for 40 years, and passed the skill down to his son, Oscar Jr. (in white).

The operation鈥檚 owner, Don Oscar, sat in a chair next to the bubbling sugarcane, with a pitchfork in both hands and a cigarette in his mouth. He鈥檇 been at this work for 40 years, and as he shoved dried husk into a fire below the bubbling caldron, he told us farmworkers drink panela with their coffee because they need energy to get through the workday. Another coffee farmer told us that panela is used to sweeten coffee because all the high-quality beans are shipped overseas, leaving only the worst, spit-out-bitter coffee for domestic consumption. The gap between farming coffee and drinking coffee is wide.

Before we left, Oscar鈥檚 son, Oscar Jr., handed us four fresh panela bricks and told us to come back any time. As we jumped back on our bikes, someone said that this was the hardest work they鈥檇 ever seen. 欧博会员入口 answered with silence, hot panela steaming in our backpacks as the rhythmic boom, hiss, clack followed us into the jungle.

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Panela is often used to make a sweet coffee drink called caf茅 campesino, which is how most coffee is served in the Colombian countryside. Oscar Jr. (left) stirs bubbling cane juice; when it thickens, it will be shaped into dense bricks and laid out to cool (right). Photos: Alex Yoder

After another seemingly endless descent, we came across another example of Sim贸n鈥檚 鈥渘ew bicycle economy:鈥� a small house with a sign advertising snacks for sale. An old lady and a little girl poked their heads out of the window. What did we want? Soda, cookies and cigarettes, please.

The old lady came out, bearing the bundle of goods. Her name is Do帽a Socorro Marin, and she has lived in the area for a few decades. As more and more bikers came down this route, she set up her little shop to sell goods as people passed. She swore that she had seen us before and asked us when we would be back. 欧博会员入口 said we hoped to be back soon. She told us to be careful of the dogs.

Forget the road less traveled. The best road is the one worn thin by the locals.

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Colombia is home to a wide variety of tropical fruits, which make for thirst-quenching trailside snacks. Sim贸n (center), Emil茅 (left) and Lucas (right) stock up on guavas while riding outside of Manizales.

La Esperanza, which literally translates 鈥渢he hope,鈥� is the last finca we visited and a model for what the future of sustainable coffee farming could look like. From a distance, the 50-acre property looks to be wild jungle, but under the canopy of most of the trees are clusters of shade-grown coffee plants. 鈥淟ike hens protecting their chickies,鈥� explains Don Hernan Perez, La Esperanza鈥檚 owner.

Hernan is tall and lanky, with soft eyes and big hands that flitter like birds as he talks. Ten years ago, Hernan began the transition to a fully regenerative operation, using farming practices that prioritize soil and water health, sequestering more carbon than traditional coffee farming. It鈥檚 the type of coffee that Alex aims to sell through Overview and that will earn top dollar from similar high-end retailers on the international market. 鈥淧hilosophy and economy are mixed here,鈥� Hernan tells us. 鈥淧hilosophy because we want to be ecological; economy because we have to pay the bills.鈥�

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Don Hernan Perez (left) shows Alex (right) around La Esperanza, pointing out the clusters of coffee plants tucked in the cooling shade of the tree canopy 鈥渓ike hens protecting their chickies,鈥� he says. Chocolate, Hernan鈥檚 Rhodesian Ridgeback, trails behind.

Hernan鈥檚 father-in-law never cut down the trees on the property, opting to grow shade-grown coffee varieties, which helped with the farm鈥檚 transition to a regenerative operation. But the first few years were still very hard, with plants producing fewer beans as if in withdrawal from chemical herbicides and fertilizers. Now that things have stabilized, and as more diversity comes onto the property, natural predators of the coffee beetle borer have all but eliminated the pest without the use of chemicals. 鈥淚f we had coffee and only coffee, there is only habitat for the things that live with the coffee or live from the coffee, and so that is why you have pests,鈥� he said. 鈥淏ut in the natural forest, you don鈥檛 find too many sick plants because there is equilibrium.鈥�

Hernan鈥檚 current focus is on cultivating wildness. 鈥淭he property is so healthy that even the elves have come back,鈥� he says half-jokingly, adding that the magical jungle creatures don鈥檛 like pesticides either.

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Hernan鈥檚 coffee farm, La Esperanza, literally translates to 鈥渢he hope鈥� and is a thriving example of the possibilities of Regenerative Organic agriculture: shade-grown coffee with no chemical inputs, on a farm prepared to withstand rising temperatures. Photo: Sofia Jaramillo

This diverse jungle, with an army of creatures ready to fight off pests and tree canopies to shade coffee plants from the sun, will help prepare his farm for the coming challenges of climate change. But while he wishes every farmer could do what he鈥檚 doing, he admits it鈥檚 difficult. The economics are hard, with an initial drop in income over the first few years. Now that he鈥檚 made the switch, he鈥檚 working to sell his coffee鈥攎arketed as听鈥攄irectly to high-end retailers like Overview who will pay more, but that requires connections to diverse markets that many rural cafeteros don鈥檛 have. For many farmers, the divide between conventional and regenerative production is so wide that transitioning would require large amounts of financial and technical support.

And herein lies the wickedness of adaptation: Preparing for climate change requires the luxury of looking past the problems of today and looking forward to 10, 20 or 30 years into the future.

As we leave, Hernan tells us to make sure we ask the elves for permission as we ride through the jungle or else we might get a flat.

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Alongside his roles as professional snowboarder and activist, Alex is also an entrepreneur. In 2018, he founded Overview Coffee to help small coffee producers transition their farms to Regenerative Organic agriculture, which will earn them more on the global market.

Our last day of biking was hard. 欧博会员入口 rode from La Esperanza along dusty dirt and concrete roads toward , Sofia鈥檚 family鈥檚 cattle ranch. During our week biking through one of the rainiest zones on the planet, we鈥檇 used our rain jackets just once. 鈥淢y uncle said we haven鈥檛 had a week this dry in six months,鈥� says Sofia. 鈥淚 feel like my abuela was looking out for us, making sure we didn鈥檛 get totally soaked.鈥�

As we rode, the jungle seemed to disentangle itself. Vines unwrapped from limbs, canopy opened into blue sky, and the feeling of sweat, dirt, work and bugs cleared away into an image of coffee production that none of us had seen at the start of the trip. In every cup, there exists a tension between romance鈥攄elicious smells, lush-green leaves, hovering hummingbirds and even jungle elves鈥攁nd the rawness of barely-scraping-by coffee farmers, invasive coffee-plant-devouring pests and a life occupied with a cycle of hard labor.

As we were pedaling, we saw someone on the side of the road waving us down. It was Ramiro, his smile as big as ever, with a kilo of green unroasted beans in his hand. He gave the bag to Alex, who would take that coffee back to his roaster in Jackson Hole to see if he can create a product that would turn US dollars into a direct, meaningful income for a coffee farmer like Ramiro.

鈥淐ome back during harvest season,鈥� Ramiro said. 鈥淎nd tell others to come!鈥�

Editor’s Note:All opinions expressed here are that of the author, and do not represent that of any employer or other organization.


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