Here's what Falcon Speciality the importer of this coffee have to say about it:
This coffee is produced by The Coffee Gardens based in the Bukyabo area, Sironko district. The lot is composed of coffee harvested by 209 local small-holder farmers who sell coffee cherry to the central washing station run by The Coffee Gardens - a progressive coffee processor and exporter with the purpose of improving farmers’ income and livelihoods through production of quality coffee. With fairness, transparency and environmental protection at the forefront, TCG supports farmers through a number of incentives including post-season bonuses, additional employment opportunities, tree distribution and a range of all-year-round training programs. This lot is their signature washed coffee, where the cherries are de-pulped, fermented in water for 40 hours before being slowly dried and sorted for export.
More about The Coffee Gardens:
The Coffee Gardens project was established in 2017 by three friends - Dana, Michael and Shak - with the goal to produce specialty coffee in an ethical way, offering a transparent and direct link between our coffee farmers and coffee drinkers. Initially working with only 1 farming family in their first years, the operation quickly grew and they now work with over 600 coffee growing families.
As the CG team explains: Quality is our reason for being. It allows us to pay farmers high prices and still invest in agricultural, social and environmental activities. Of course, the foundation of a good coffee is fresh, red, ripe cherries full of sugars to feed the fermentation process. In a time of intense price volatility, we work hard to create the right incentives so farmers decide to deliver only red cherries day after day. We also have rigorous sorting protocols in place starting in farmers’ gardens, and at every stage from our buying centres, throughout processing and all the way to export preparation.
Whilst quality is at the centre of their coffee production, The Coffee Gardens team work holistically to contribute to positive local development. With clearly defined objectives, they strive to improve farmers income and livelihoods, create and provide rural employment, promote gender equality, increase transparency and traceability throughout the supply chain, promote and work on environmental protection in the area and provide farmer training in Good Agricultural Practises (GAP).
The Coffee Gardens also incentivise and reward farmers through a number of different monetary and non-monetary ways. These include post-season bonuses, additional income-generating and employment opportunities, tree distribution and a range of all-year-round training programs. The Coffee Gardens is transparent with their partner farmers about buying policy and prices, providing each registered farmer with a contract and a buying-record book, communicating any price changes via SMS to registered farmers, and providing receipts for every transaction.