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WATCH: Keeping the organic coffee farming tradition in Sagada alive

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ORGANIC COFFEE. Organic arabica coffee cherries. Photo by Marti Bartolome

SAGADA, Philippines – Sagada boasts of magnificent mountain scenes and enchanting adventure trails. At over 5,000 meters above sea level, the highlands are home to breathtaking sunrise views, the country's best organic coffee, and dutiful northern land keepers. 

Travelers take home colourful experiences. Locals, however, lose their younger generation to either the cities or tourism-related jobs in the pcturesque town, leaving their aging relatives to cultivate coffee plantations and keep the tradition alive. 

The number of tourists in Sagada skyrocketed to 138,257 in 2015 from 65,000 in 2014. Coffee farmer Goad Sibayan understands this is a natural phenomenon.

“This dilemma is a mix of labor, generation, and environmental conservation gap,” he says. “Tourism is good in the pocket, but I don’t know if it makes them genuinely happy. We have lost a whole generation of coffee farmers to the cities even if Sagada is very agricultural.”

With a history degree, Sibayan fit smack in the center of tourism and dedicated 11 years of his life as a tour guide in the north. However, the culture shift pushed him to devote his life to organic coffee farming.

Today, he is one of the partner farmers of the Coffee Heritage Project led by Rich Watanabe and Butch Acop.

COFFEE FARMERS. Rich Watanabe with Sagada partner farmers. Photo by Marti Bartolome

Coffee heritage project 

Its proponents describe the CHP as “a simple movement that promotes a fruitful collaboration amongst partner farmers, scientists, soil specialists, etymologists and any person who has the heart for uplifting the value of Philippine coffee.”

How does CHP help its partner farmers? The team organizes annual coffee planting and harvesting programs with volunteer participants, and it recently recorded its highest volunteer turnout for a planting trip in June. Acop says this is part of the trust you have to keep and earn from the coffee farmers.

“Relationship is key and you need that bond unbreakable by money," he says.

Watanabe says the CHP creates something more valuable than profit.

“The socio-cultural interaction makes the process more sustainable. There’s no need for modern technology or any developer to buy land, which will destroy nature’s cycle and eventually disempower the farmers. You don’t buy the land and take over. Instead, you help them find ways to grow better coffee and distribute what they produce more efficiently," he says.

PLANTING. Coffee Heritage Project planting, June 2017. Photo by Marti Bartolome

Jun Depidep, another CHP pioneer, offers a small picturesque house for the group. Acop says it is designed to be the consolidating area for coffee farmers in the area. “This is the future of Sagada coffee," he adds.

Keeping the tradition alive

Today, it is called the Coffee Heritage House, ready to receive travelers and CHP volunteers alike.

Depidep knows it has always been CHP’s aim to elevate appreciation for culture and tradition. This is the same reason why he trusted Watanabe as a partner.

“One of the most fulfilling experiences CHP brought me was when my 10- year-old son came up to me few days ago and said he wanted to be a farmer when he grows up," he says.

Not only does the CHP inspire locals to keep their tradition and metropolitans to help out, but it also produces world-class coffee. Through Sibayan, Watanabe, and Acop’s collaboration, Sagada’s organic coffee won the Medaille Gourmet in the International Contest of Coffees Roasted in their Countries of Origin held by the Agency for the Valorization of Agricultural Products (AVPA) in June.

AVPA’s objective is “to contribute to enhancing the value of agricultural products and to recognize the excellence of some producers too often forgotten in the midst of the requirements of mass marketing.” 

Acop agrees the bayanihan process makes the coffee richer.

PROCESSING. Coffee grinding at the Coffee Heritage House. Photo by Marti Bartolome

“It is indeed a pleasant surprise to the group. We will take whatever will help our cause for as long as it doesn’t sacrifice the farmers and the bigger picture of Philippine artisanal coffee. Even my wife and her advertising agency has a digital campaign for CHP. It’s just touching lives in many different ways," he says.

The winning batch of roasted coffee came from Sibayan’s own harvest, also known as Bana’s Coffee.

He’s elated with the award but also careful not to rely on it to boost heritage conservation and coffee production.

Ayaw namin ng limelight dahil hindi iyan ang nagpapasarap ng kape (We don’t want  the limelight because it’s not the secret to better-tasting coffee). Between development and keeping tradition, we’ll always choose the latter.” – Rappler.com 

With the coffee sciences center, the CHP team is the only coffee school that has its own farm and award-winning brand. Visit them at No. 45 Maalalahanin St, Teacher’s Village, Quezon City. 


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