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Staff Visit, Oaxaca, Mexico - Dec. 2007 |
In early December, Coffee Kids staff
visited Oaxaca, Mexico, to learn about
some of the programs supported by Coffee
Kids partner, CAMPO, and a dry mill run
by our partner, FomCafe.
The visit included a tour of CAMPO’s
new educational center. Buildings are
still under construction, but CAMPO is
already using the installations to
provide training to coffee farmers from
around the state of Oaxaca.
Demonstration projects include worm
composting and standard composting;
organic gardening and greehouse
projects; fish, sheep, rabbit and
chicken production; and responsible
building techniques
CAMPO’s offices are being constructed
using a compacted earth technique, which
is similar to adobe with a mix of soil,
sand, lime and water optimized for local
conditions and compacted into a sturdy
wall.
The day after our visit to the center,
we traveled two hours down windy roads
into the mountains outside of Oaxaca,
and then two more hours down a dirt road
clinging to the side of said mountains.
After four hours of stomach-turning
travel, we arrived in Santa Cruz
Tepetotutla, a small town clinging to
the mountain.
The town is in the middle of a globally
important bio-reserve. Jaguars and
tepesquintle (similar to a giant spotted
rat) maraud the area and lush forests
hem the town in. Most families work in
coffee and have struggled for years.
Thanks to CAMPO’s help many have begun
working in other areas to supplement
their income and provide a better
quality of life for their families and
improve their community.
The organic coffee plot of Don Raymundo
Osorio was a striking example of
biodiversity and responsible management.
His tall coffee bushes were ready for
harvest and vanilla vines crawled up
their stems providing two cash crops on
the same shady plot. Raymundo showed us
the beginnings of a greenhouse, which
will provide vegetables year round, part
of a project the community is doing with
CAMPO’s support.
The following day we followed a steep
footpath straight down the mountain to
arrive at the neighboring community of
San Antonio del Barrio, still
inaccessible by road. We arrived sweaty
and tired in this tiny town in the
valley, where we were welcomed by local
officials and a marimba band. We met
with a group of women who, with CAMPO’s
help, have started selling their
elaborate, hand-embroidered huipiles
(traditional blouses) in Oaxaca City.
After the visit, we made the long
journey back to Oaxaca City.
The next morning we visited with Coffee
Kids partner FomCafé and toured a dry
mill, recently purchased by four Oaxacan
coffee cooperatives to consolidate and
gain control over their production
process. We learned about the detailed
steps of dry mill processing, but more
importantly how the four cooperatives
pooled their resources to purchase the
mill.
Like so much of what we saw on this
trip, it was a reminder of just how
enterprising people can be when they are
determined to create a better life, and
just how much impoverished communities
can accomplish with a little bit of
help.
30 photos | 266 views
items are from between 08 Dec 2007 & 11 Dec 2007.