The Whistling School Boy - Biodiversity Friendly Coffee (Arabica + Robusta with 20% Chicory)
Traditional South Indian filter kaapi with a side of biodiversity! This blend of handpulped and sundried Arabica and Robusta beans is the cuppa you want to want to wake up to. But there's more to this coffee than the perfect aroma and flavour it is grown in a thriving ecological landscape, where the forest is not clearfelled for the coffee. Biologically important trees support a healthy and diverse population of wild creatures from bees to wild bovines, and ensure that everyone is as happy as you will be when you take a sip of this smooth, sweet, shadegrown brew.
.
Why we like it
We all love good cup of coffee, but good coffee that's also good for the environment, wildlife and the people who grow it? Not that hard to come by, it turns out.
The Product
Product name: The Whistling School Boy Biodiversity Friendly Coffee (Arabica + Robusta with 20% Chicory)
Package contents: 1 The Whistling School Boy Biodiversity Friendly Coffee (Arabica + Robusta with 20% Chicory)
Roast type : Medium Dark
Grind Type : Medium Fine
Ingredients: A blend of Arabica and Robusta beans with 20% Chicory.
The beans in this coffee were grown in the BR Hills of Karnataka by smallscale growers who abide by biodiversityfriendly practices. This means that they abstain from the use of chemical pesticides, and ensure conservation of plant and species diversity, and soil and water quality.
The Artisans
The Arabica coffee beans have been harvested by smallscale producers in Yerakannagadde podu, and hand pulped in BR Hills by members of the Biligiri Soligara Coffee Belegarara Sangha a coffee producers' organisation. Through the producer organisation, growers' capacities are built to engage in markets in ways that feel fair, transparent and democratic. The brand guarantees livelihood security and recognition for coffee producers with best practices and assures prices that are consistently above the declared market price at the time of purchase.
Your Impact
Coffee has become such an integral part of our morning routines that's it's not not a crop we give too much to. Yet, coffee growing is among prime sources of deforestation in the Western Ghats. By supporting ecologically sustainable coffee, you make it an economically viable for small growers to continue their commitment to biodiversity conservation.
