Raise the Coffee Cup: LEC, LAMP 38’s Negros Coffee Farm Exposure with PhilCAFE


Photos and Story By Georgene Quilaton-Tambiga

The Laudato Si’ Environmental Center of Colegio de Sto. Tomas-Recoletos (LEC) and Life and Mission Project or LAMP 38 with Colegio de San Nicolas Tolentino-Recoletos ascended to 869 meters above sea level, at the Municipality of Don Salvador Benedicto (DSB), Negros Occidental, to experience firsthand the rarely known coffee value chain.

With the Philippine Coffee Advancement & Farm Enterprise (PhilCAFE) of Agricultural Cooperative Development International/Volunteers in Overseas Cooperative Assistance (ACDI/VOCA) as  facilitator, four Augustinian Recollect administrators and teachers encountered coffee in a whole new way—from farm to cup. Rev. Fr. Vicente Ramon, Jr., OAR, LEC director, led the Augustinian Recollect delegation.

The Coffee Experience. Laudato Si’ Environmental Center and Life & Mission Project 38 at the Electo Villaster Farm, Barangay Bunga, Municipality of Don Salvador Benedicto. An all-weather coffee dryer is at the background.

The Climate Change Narrative

Climate change has highly impacted coffee farming and production, especially in the Philippines.

PhilCAFE Business Development and Training Coordinator Ariel Lastica highlighted this while citing data from the World Coffee Research, a PhilCAFE partner.

“In the next ten years, coffee can no longer grow in areas where arabica coffee trees are now growing.”

The required elevation for arabica, generally considered a superior variety, has also increased—from 800 to at least 1,000 meters above sea level—due to warming temperature.

Meanwhile, in Minoyan, Murcia town, Mr. Teddy Cañete, president of the Minoyan Murcia Marginal Coffee Growers Agri-Cooperative, lamented that super Typhoon Odette (International name: Rai) has destroyed a large portion of their plantation. The agri-cooperative’s coffee drying dome was also slashed into pieces by the typhoon’s ripping wind and growers like him had to salvage inferior beans by putting them up to dry on rooftops.

As Cañete showed the coffee cherry de-pulping process, he shared that there is a shortage of quality coffee in Negros, an aftermath of the typhoon’s destruction.

This situation proves true Pope Francis’s Pastoral Letter on the Environment and Human Development in Bolivia (quoted in the Laudato Si’ Encyclical) that “Both everyday experience and scientific research show that the gravest effects of all attacks on the environment are suffered by the poorest.”

Uplift Coffee Farmers

            As LEC continues to seek for and promote effective methods of sustainable farming, Lastica brought the delegates to the farm of Mr. Electo Villaster, coffee farmer and Vice-President of Don Salvador Benedicto Integrated Social Forestry Federation (ISF). Mr. Villaster, who is a retired fireman, treated the team to hot cups of brewed coffee while he shared the story of his five-year old farm in Barangay Bunga, DSB. PhilCAFE has assigned it as a demo-farm with 1,200 coffee trees.

“We do not have our coffee if we do not have our farmers.” Lastica pointed out. He added that to truly support Philippine coffee means to get educated about its value chain—from its farming to trading.

Provincial Environment & Management Office (PEMO) forester Samuel Maja said that once the town of Don Salvador Benedicto was a coffee plantation because its elevation made it ideal for growing coffee trees but gullible farmers were forced to sell at very cheap prices by fraudulent traders.

While PhilCAFE, as an NGO, aims to bring together and mentor 13,700 coffee farmers, it also aims to improve the farmers’ mindset so that they now apply scientific and proven coffee production methods and efficient trading techniques, all while their values of integrity and honesty are formed.

Pope Francis has constantly warned that “the defenseless” often fall victims of “the interests of a deified market,” as what is happening among farmers.

Coffee Community

At another site, in Barangay Bagong Silang, DSB, coffee growers gathered at the PEMO Nursery, for the mentoring program. LEC and LAMP 38 delegates observed as farmers learn to make their own farm plans and maps with mentor Bene Crucero, a coffee farmer and ISF member.

While the delegates inhaled the aroma of freshly brewed cups of robusta, tendered with care and hard labor by Negrense  growers, the group contemplated on ways to help promote locally grown and processed coffee and to expand the Philippine market for quality coffee—a steep goal but doable with community effort.

Fireman to Farmer. Villaster demostrates pruning techniques and borer infected coffee cherries.
Growing Coffee. Two meters is ideal height of well-maintained coffee trees.
Sustainable Farming. Rev. Fr. Vicente Ramon, Jr., OAR (right) and Villaster talk about sustainable farming techniques while farms in the town of Don Salvador Benedicto re-build after the typhoon.
The Coffee Situation. PhilCAFE’s Ariel Lastica shows the Philippine Coffee Map. The Philippines only contributes 1 % to the total world coffee produce.
Sowing Love, Growing Sustainably. Rev. Fr. Joel Alve, OAR (right) tours the farm of 1,200 robusta trees.
Pick Ripe. LEC Coordinator Margot Hibionada and Fr. Ramon hold freshly picked coffee cherries.

 

From the Farm to Your Cup. Rev. Fr. Anthony Morillo, OAR, director and principal of Colegio de San Nicolas Tolentino-Recoletos and chairman of LAMP 38 helps to get the ripe cherries ready for the flotation process.
Blooming in Adversity. Defying the destruction by a harsher climate, flowers shoot out from a healthy coffee stem.
The Coffee Education. Science teacher Gleece Villegas scrutinizes and compares healthy versus infected coffee beans.
The Next Generation. Ms. Ma. Nita Bolo (center) gets insights from young women farmers at the coffee mentoring session.
Community Workers. Coffee farmer and mentor Bene Crucero (far right) gives Fr. Ramon and LEC delegates a warm welcome.
Cupping. Here, Fr. Ramon accepts the fruit of the harvest of coffee growers of Bagong Silang. In hindsight, there are only two certified Filipino coffee graders in the Visayas.
De-Pulping. Mr. Teddy Canete of Minoyan, Murcia (left) gives Rev. Fr. Renier Alviola, OAR, a first-hand try at using the de-pulping machine that separates the cherry pulp and the bean.
Green Coffee. Beans are drying inside a make-shift all-weather dryer. To produce quality coffee, these beans will still undergo another stage of sorting.
Cup After Cup. Each reverent sip is a show of gratitude to the love and toil of Negrense coffee growers as they aim to sustainably farm and process quality coffee.

 

 

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