This blog post was written by Joy Maguvo, Long Miles Coffee Story Assistant.
Apollinaire Nzobonimpa is a coffee farmer from Nkonge Hill in Burundi and is very involved in maintaining his coffee plantations.
Along with the help of coffee scouts, he is able to manage pruning, mulching and applying fertilizer to his crops. However, there are some tasks, such as applying disease-eliminating coffee spray, that are out of his control and in the hands of the government. As many coffee farmers know, these coffee sprays can be a key to healthy-growing coffee trees. Without them, cherry growth can suffer.
Over time, many coffee farmers in Burundi have been struggling with Urukarakara, a coffee berry disease (CBD). The impact of CBD has been felt nationwide and it’s known that coffee spray could be the resolve many coffee farmers are looking for. Unfortunately, the requests for these cherry-saving chemicals are sometimes met with an unfavorable answer; “the chemicals to help eliminate CBD are very expensive – even the government is not able to get them right now.”
Even so, if the government receives the chemicals, the process to obtain them can still be quite long. Once in the hands of commune agronomists they are given to coffee monitors (i.e. government coffee scouts) who then manage distribution to coffee farmers. With so many coffee farmers in Burundi, the waiting game can prove itself to be costly.
This year, for Apollinaire and many other farmers, a miracle has truly happened! A nationwide coffee spray campaign has taken place to help better manage CBD and ward off the damage from insects.
Along with coffee spray, a powder-based chemical has become available. Not only is it the first time in Apollinaire’s coffee-growing career that he has seen anything like it, other farmers have been equally as amazed. “There is no way to explain the joy we have in receiving this CBD-fighting powder,” said Apollinaire. “We can’t wait to see the good changes!”
With each coffee farmer in Burundi receiving enough powder to spray all of their trees, there is much hope that the negative impact of CBD will be managed…or better yet…eradicated completely.