Coffee review

The St. Cristobal Coffee Manor in the Galapagos Islands that was once forced to give up

Published: 2024-09-17 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/17, As the world coffee industry is moving towards a targeted mass production model, this small-scale and uncertain coffee industry is in trouble and may eventually be forced to give up without profit. In the early 1990s, however, the Gonzalez family bought Hasunda Coffee Park. Local microclimate caused by the Humboldt current (Humboldt Current), strong

As the world coffee industry is moving towards a targeted mass production model,

The coffee industry, which is small and of precarious quality, is in trouble and is likely to be forced to give up without profit.

In the early 1990s, however, the Gonzalez family bought Hasunda Coffee Park. The localized microclimate caused by the Humboldt current (Humboldt Current), strong equatorial sunlight and sharp temperature changes (43 ℃ at sea level and 10: 16 ℃ at 275m above sea level) provide a unique advantage, prompting the Gonzalez family to expand their coffee plantation.

Since then, the area of the coffee plantation has doubled through the reclamation of early land. Because of the unique role of the Galapagos Islands in the course of history, the Ecuadorian government has turned the Galapagos Islands into a national park and no longer allows land to be reclaimed as new agricultural land. and the introduction and use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides and other chemicals are strictly prohibited, so coffee in the Galapagos Islands is recognized as a natural product.

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