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Most of the world's coffee is grown by small farmers on 5-7 acres of
land, and harvested by hand in large baskets or sacks
by the farmers and their families when the cherries are red and
ripe. In some coffee farming communities, the coffee
harvest is a rotating project where the
entire community shares in the activity and moves from farm to farm as
the crop
ripens.
In countries like Brazil, where the land is flat and larger farms dominate the landscape,
mechanical harvesters are commonly used to pick the crop.
Hand Picking
 Basket for coffee harvest Because all of the
coffee cherries do not ripen at the same time, it usually takes 3-7 pickings
to complete the harvest. These pickings
encompass the three stages of the harvest: the beginning, middle and end.
The taste of
coffee from the beginning of the harvest is usually green, herbaceous and
undeveloped. The end of the crop usually produces older, over-ripe and
undesireable characteristics in flavor.
Equal Exchange's coffee is picked exclusively by hand, and we only buy
coffee from the middle part of the harvest, when the most fruit is produced and the quality is the highest.
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