Fri. Nov 15th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

When Luke Fryett visited some friends in the highlands of Fiji, he watched as local children sucked on and spat out the pips of “cherries” growing on trees all around the village.

Those cherries turned out to be wild coffee beans — the small, round stone fruit produced by the coffee plant.

“I couldn’t believe that there was so much coffee around and nothing was being done with it,” Mr Fryett said.

“It was just falling on the ground and going rotten.”

The fateful day over a decade ago led the New Zealander to establish Bula Coffee, which has grown into one of the country’s first agritourism ventures.

Man peers into coffee plant
Luke Fryett says looking after people and the environment are central to the operation’s success.(ABC Rural: Lucy Cooper)

Mr Fryett started by harvesting 20 kilograms of cherries from just one family’s coffee plants.

“Nobody would believe us that we would buy coffee and that we would pay them for it,” he said.

“So, we just started with one family and slowly grew it from there.

“Now we’re buying off about 5,000 people annually and we’re doing about 60 tonnes of cherries now.”

A murky history

The coffee industry in Fiji relies on the efforts of those living in rural villages to harvest the wild coffee.

But this has left room for exploitation.

Mr Fryett and his team are hoping to change that by working off three key pillars: people, planet and profits.

“If any one of them grows without the other two growing with it, then we consider that as the business isn’t succeeding,” he said.

“We can’t be turning over huge profits and destroying the planet and not looking after the people that we set out to help.”

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