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Sampling Colombia´s most important LEGAL export


Destinations > South America > Colombia > Pereira > Travel Blog: The Silk Route to South A ... > Sampling Colombia´s most important LEGAL export


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The Silk Route to South America - or how we´re getting from Azerbaijan to Argentina in just under twelve months!

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Sampling Colombia´s most important LEGAL export

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Thursday, Apr 19, 2007  15:55

Entry 140 of 160 | show all | print this entry
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01 View from
the Finca Villa
Maria
01 View from the Finca Villa Maria

02 Relaxing on
the terrace
02 Relaxing on the terrace

03 View from
the Finca Villa
Maria
03 View from the Finca Villa Maria

Show all 45 thumbnails

The morning we were due to leave The Black Sheep in Medellin I tried to make a reservation at a coffee finca near Pereira, but despite speaking to four different people in my best broken Spanish my attempts were frustrated. Luckily Kelvin, the Kiwi owner of the hostel, made the call for me and confirmed that the Finca Villa Maria did have a room available for us and they´d hold it until we got there.

We took a taxi to the southern bus station bought tickets and breakfast and were on the road at 11. It was a leisurely start to the day. The journey took around 5 hours to Pereira, then we took a taxi to a village a few kilometres outside and then got into an unmarked car parked by the side of the road, because the driver said he could take us to the Finca.

We didn´t even need hindsight to tell us this was probably not a great idea, but thankfully the monosyllabic driver didn´t take us down a dead end and rob us of all our valuables at gun point. In fact he drove us straight there and we found out the following day he was the manager of the plantation.

The finca is set on a lush green hillside about 12 kilometres outside Pereira in the heart of the Zona Cafeteria. The farmers in this area grow the bulk of Colombia´s most important legal export and help it remain the world´s number two coffee producer after Brazil. Since the price of crop fell dramatically a decade ago many farms went out of business. The more enterprising of the growers are still harvesting coffee, but now supplement their income by renting rooms out to tourists.

This is the case with the Finca Villa Maria, it´s an 80 hectare estate, one of the biggest in the region. They can accommodate 15 guests, when we were there there were seven of us. Us two, Mark and Simon, two 23 year-old Kiwis who´d also travelled from Medellin, and Emily, Emma and Claire. The first two are Irish college friends travelling together for a year and Claire is an 18 year-old gap year student from Bristol. They all been more organised than us and so had had some time to enjoy the pool and chilled out atmosphere of the place before we arrived, but it didn´t take us long to get chatting.

We ate all our meals at the finca and after a few beers on the first night got to bed relatively early as the whole family had already turned in and all the others were whacked after a solid few days of partying.

The next day we had breakfast at about nine and then Jim asked about the possibility of going riding. The woman of the house sent someone to saddle up the horses for us, but when I realised there were only two of them and no guide, I had a bit of a wobble. I was already sat on mine, when Jim correctly surmised that I didn´t want to be the first to see just how responsive these horses were. No one spoke any English and our Colombian equine related vocabulary is quite limited, so I chickened out of going first and Jim got Mark and Simon to take our places.

We didn´t realise at the time, but Mark had never ridden a horse before and Simon had only done it once. They set off at a trot up the hill the groom indicated and all we could hear were some slightly nervous laughter mingled with the sound of the horses hooves. We walked along the track behind them and found Mark´s straw hat abandoned in the hedge at the first bend. We later saw them racing past us as apparently one of the coffee pickers they passed on the road had taken great delight in whistling in such a way as to make the horses bolt.

They managed to slow them down a bit at the summit I think, but the guy did it again on the way down so they had quite an exciting ride. Despite all this, Jim was keen that we still had a turn so we mounted the two, very sweaty horses, after the boys had retired to the hammocks. The groom was great and offered to lead my horse up the hill. It really helped me gain some confidence and I was soon asking him to let us go it alone. To be honest we both felt slightly bad as he was willing to walk the whole way up this very steep hill and the weather was very muggy, so he waited for us by the side off the road as went up to the top.

It was really lovely riding to the crest of the hill - the views were fabulous. We passed a handful of coffee pickers having their lunch (thankfully the whistling guy didn´t try that trick on us!) and surveyed the crops, flowers and butterflies. As the saying goes, I was really glad I got back on the horse.

After lunch we relaxed on the wooden balcony overlooking the countryside, while reading and swinging hammocks. It was just perfect. We saw loads of brightly coloured birds - blues, greens and reds and watched as humming birds sucked nectar from exotic flowers.

Thunder was rolling around and it was threatening a storm so we decided to take a dip before the weather got worse. Jim chickened out though and didn´t get more than his little toe wet. I braved the rain - by this time it was chucking it down - and swam 50 lengths. The first real exercise other than walking, I´ve had in a long time.

Dinner was served at about 6:30 and afterwards we got our tour of the coffee operations. The former owner of the plantation (he only sold it 18 days previously) came by to show us around. It´s the low season at the moment and they only have about 10 men harvesting the berries he explained that in September - November they´d have more like 150.

It´s an organic farm, but apart from the picking, shelling and drying of the beans they don´t do any of the other processing. They sell their stock to a factory in the town that roasts the beans, grinds them, packages and sells them. We watched as the sacks with that days´ harvest in, were emptied into a machine that sorted the ripe ones from the unripe ones and popped them out of their skins. When they came out they were cream coloured and slimy, so next they were washed and then they would be air dried for 24 - 28 hours, before being bagged up and shipped out.

Our guide told us about the intricacies of the market. Ten years ago there was a slump in the price of coffee due to overproduction, about 95 million tons were bought, but 115 million tons were produced. The price fell to 45 US Cents a pound, fortunately for people in this area, the market has improved (probably thanks to Starbucks and Costa Coffee and the like) and prices are now generally between $1.15 and $1.20 a pound. His family had run the finca for over thirty years, but decided to get out of the business this year, why he didn´t say.

The brief tour was really interesting and we retired to our comfy seats on the porch to mull over what we´d just heard. It didn´t take long for someone to suggest we play a drinking game though and sure enough our highbrow conversation about the international commodities market degenerated into drunken arguments over who wasn´t abiding by the international drinking rules.

The seven of us got through three litres of rum, a stem of exotic flowers that made perfect beaks (see photos for further enlightenment!) and several tried and tested drinking games before calling it a night at around half past twelve.

The next morning wasn´t pretty, especially as Jim and I had to leave at nine to get a taxi to the bus station to continue our journey south. We had breakfast alone as the others were still KO´d but we did wave goodbye before we set off.

I´m not sure what our hosts thought of us - as we were settling our bill, Jim tried to make clear that we needed to pay for two more beers than she´d charged us for. She clearly misunderstood though as she sent her mother to the fridge to go and get us two more cans of Poker. I think she thought we wanted to get on it again at 8.30 in the morning - believe me when I say, nothing could have been further from our minds!


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Ex Colombian Cocaine Capital
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Table of Contents
1 - 20 | 21 - 40 | 41 - 60 | 61 - 80 | 81 - 100 | 101 - 120 | 121 - 140 | 141 - 160
Eating so much, we need new clothes... | Muse on Colombian busesshow all entries
 (show entry-less map pins)

121.Striking gold on the Costa Verde - Paraty, Brazil Mar 04, 2007 ( This entry has 9 photos 9 )
122.Staying safe in São Paulo - São Paulo, Brazil Mar 05, 2007 ( This entry has 11 photos 11 )
123.Poor Niagra! - Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil Mar 07, 2007 ( This entry has 9 photos 9 )
124.Poor Niagra! (Part 2) - Puerto Iguazú, Argentina Mar 08, 2007 ( This entry has 9 photos 9 )
125.Flying visit to the Capital - Buenos Aires, Argentina Mar 09, 2007 ( This entry has 6 photos 6 )
126.Keeping up with the Joneses - Puerto Madryn, Argentina Mar 11, 2007 ( This entry has 42 photos 42 )
127.Too much ice for one gin and tonic! - El Calafate, Argentina Mar 14, 2007 ( This entry has 17 photos 17 )
128.Supertrekking and Glacier Walking - El Chaltén, Argentina Mar 17, 2007 ( This entry has 23 photos 23 ) ( Comments 1 )
129.Pushing through the Paine barrier - Puerto Natales / Parque Nacional Torres del Paine, Chile Mar 21, 2007 ( This entry has 30 photos 30 ) ( Comments 1 )
130.The end of the world is nigh! - Ushuaia, Argentina Mar 26, 2007 ( This entry has 38 photos 38 )
131.Sod the sightseeing, let´s drink champagne! - Buenos Aires, Argentina Mar 28, 2007 ( This entry has 7 photos 7 )
132.24 hours in Uruguay - Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay Mar 29, 2007 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 )
133.Football, Tango and Evita - Buenos Aires, Argentina Apr 01, 2007 ( This entry has 43 photos 43 )
134.Stop thief! - Mendoza, Argentina Apr 03, 2007 ( This entry has 11 photos 11 )
135.Chilling out on the Chilean coast - Valparaiso, Chile Apr 05, 2007 ( This entry has 29 photos 29 )
136.Santiago es cerrado! - Santiago, Chile Apr 07, 2007 ( This entry has 11 photos 11 )
137.Finding El Dorado - Bogota, Colombia Apr 10, 2007 ( This entry has 25 photos 25 ) ( Comments 1 )
138.Colonial Colombia - Cartagena, Colombia Apr 14, 2007 ( This entry has 39 photos 39 )
139.Ex Colombian Cocaine Capital - Medellin, Colombia Apr 17, 2007 ( This entry has 17 photos 17 )
140.Sampling Colombia´s most important LEGAL export - Pereira, Colombia Apr 19, 2007 ( This entry has 45 photos 45 )

Eating so much, we need new clothes... | Muse on Colombian busesshow all entries
 (show entry-less map pins)
1 - 20 | 21 - 40 | 41 - 60 | 61 - 80 | 81 - 100 | 101 - 120 | 121 - 140 | 141 - 160

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