*Roast days are Tuesday and Thursday. Order by Sunday 11:59 pm EST
for Wednesday shipment or Tuesday 11:59 pm EST for Friday shipment
*Roast days are Tuesday and Thursday. Order by Sunday 11:59 pm EST
for Wednesday shipment or Tuesday 11:59 pm EST for Friday shipment
Specs
Producer Tony Medina
Farm La Colina
Region Chimaltenango, Guatemala
Harvest Spring 2024
Varieties Bourbon
Process Washed
Altitude 1,700 masl
Importer Primavera
Producer Profile
Just one quarter of Tony’s property is planted with coffee- the rest is native forest, protected by Tony and monitored by the government who support Tony financially to protect native flora and fauna. Similarly, the water Tony uses for processing comes from the farm and is protected. The forest on his farm is certified by the National Institution of Protection of Forests (INAB). He farms 64 manzanas of coffee: half in Caturra, half in Borbon, much of the latter is currently re-growing after pruning. In 2019, he planted 5,000 Gesha plants, as well as some Pacamara.
He has planted many native leguminous shade trees, called Chalum, while also managing shade with pine and cedar trees as well. He prunes his shade trees only during the full moon, when plant fluids are concentrated in lower plant parts and roots, meaning that the pruning cuts to retard growth are more effective. His soils have large rocks and boulders which protect from erosion, and his farm is home to lots of native squirrels, rabbits and snakes.
Tony is a fourth generation grower, twenty years in himself. In the past, he had sold coffee in cherry, like the vast majority of Guatemala’s small producers, and less than 10 years ago started drying his coffee to sell parchment at differentiated prices. He has five daughters, and he is able to put them all through university thanks to selling specialty coffee. Selling parchment at differentiated prices has allowed Tony to give his daughters opportunities he never had himself. Tony is hoping to be able to purchase a guardiola- a mechanical dryer- for more even drying, and to be less dependent upon weather and patio space. Tony has given the upper part of his farm to members of the local indigenous community who work on his farm.
Chimaltenango lies between Antigua to the south and Huehuetenago to the north. Chimaltenango is notably dry for a Guatemalan coffee growing region, but boasts an abundance of natural springs and ideal micro-climates for growing coffee.
The famed and highly sought-after Gesha variety is originally from Ethiopia. It was transported to Latin America in the 1950s where it was noted for its tolerance to leaf rust. In 2005, the variety was "rediscovered" when it won that year's Best of Panama competition. Since then, it has gone on to break price records at auction year after year and has been planted by farmers across Latin America in hopes of securing high prices.
The variety itself is highly demanding, and it requires high elevations in order to really deliver the exceptional floral, jasmine and stone fruit cup characteristics it is so famous for. There are actually a number of genetically distinct varieties that carry the name Gesha, and most have been traced back to Landraces from the same geographic area in Ethiopia.
Traditional tank fermentation takes around 36 hours, followed by traditional patio drying over eight days. To reduce the amount of water used, Antonio has a demucilager to mechanically wash the fermented coffee. An ecologically minded farmer, Tony fertilizes with top-grade and highly efficient inputs to be able to apply less frequently and in less
volume, he decomposes and composts coffee pulp before applying it back to the farm as organic fertilizer, practices manual weeding and sprays just twice a year for roya with the most non-toxic product on the market.
IMPORTER | Shared Source |
FARMGATE PRICINGWhat's this?FOB: "Freight on board," usually the price paid to the coffee exporter for coffee ready to ship. This includes price paid to the producer as well as milling, warehousing and transportation costs plus any intermediaries' fees and export costs. Farmgate: the price paid by the exporter or other buyer to the producer or producer organization. | 1711 GTQ per quintale (100lb of parchment) |
SUBTEXT PAID | $5.30 USD per lb |
LOT SIZE | Total lot size of 115 quintales of parchment. Subtext purchased 1,035 kg. |
RELATIONSHIP LENGTH | Shared Source has been working with Tony since 2017. This is the fourth season we have purchased Tony's coffee. |
QUALITY | Subtext cupping score of 85.5 |