"The Man Who Planted Trees" a short story by Jean Giono


This is a very short, but non-the-less hugely inspiring work that Pangea Proxima would like to share with our friends and supporters. The story was published in 1953 and is only 4,000 words long so it will not take much time to read. This story inspires our work and we hope it inspires you.

     In order for the character of a human being to reveal truly exceptional qualities, we must have the good fortune to observe its action over a long period of years. If this action is devoid of all selfishness, if the idea that directs it is one of unqualified generosity, if it is absolutely certain that it has not sought recompense anywhere, and if moreover it has left visible marks on the world, then we are unquestionably dealing with an unforgettable character.



     
About forty years ago I went on a long hike, through hills absolutely unknown to tourists, in that very old region where the Alps penetrate into Provence.
     This region is bounded to the south-east and south by the middle course of the Durance, between Sisteron and Mirabeau; to the north by the upper course of the Drôme, from its source down to Die; to the west by the plains of Comtat Venaissin and the outskirts of Mont Ventoux. It includes all the northern part of the Département of Basses-Alpes, the south of Drôme and a little enclave of Vaucluse.
     At the time I undertook my long walk through this deserted region, it consisted of barren and monotonous lands, at about 1200 to 1300 meters above sea level. Nothing grew there except wild lavender.
     I was crossing this country at its widest part, and after walking for three days, I found myself in the most complete desolation. I was camped next to the skeleton of an abandoned village. I had used the last of my water the day before and I needed to find more. Even though they were in ruins, these houses all huddled together and looking like an old wasps' nest made me think that there must at one time have been a spring or a well there. There was indeed a spring, but it was dry. The five or six roofless houses, ravaged by sun and wind, and the small chapel with its tumble-down belfry, were arrayed like the houses and chapels of living villages, but all life had disappeared.

     It was a beautiful June day with plenty of sun, but on these shelterless lands, high up in the sky, the wind whistled with an unendurable brutality. Its growling in the carcasses of the houses was like that of a wild beast disturbed during its meal.
     I had to move my camp. After five hours of walking, I still hadn't found water, and nothing gave me hope of finding any. Everywhere there was the same dryness, the same stiff, woody plants. I thought I saw in the distance a small black silhouette. On a chance I headed towards it. It was a shepherd. Thirty lambs or so were resting near him on the scorching ground.
     He gave me a drink from his gourd and a little later he led me to his shepherd's cottage, tucked down in an undulation of the plateau. He drew his water - excellent - from a natural hole, very deep, above which he had installed a rudimentary windlass.

     This man spoke little. This is common among those who live alone, but he seemed sure of himself, and confident in this assurance, which seemed remarkable in this land shorn of everything. He lived not in a cabin but in a real house of stone, from the looks of which it was clear that his own labor had restored the ruins he had found on his arrival. His roof was solid and water-tight. The wind struck against the roof tiles with the sound of the sea crashing on the beach.
     His household was in order, his dishes washed, his floor swept, his rifle greased; his soup boiled over the fire; I noticed then that he was also freshly shaven, that all his buttons were solidly sewn, and that his clothes were mended with such care as to make the patches invisible.
     He shared his soup with me, and when afterwards I offered him my tobacco pouch, he told me that he didn't smoke. His dog, as silent as he, was friendly without being fawning.

     It had been agreed immediately that I would pass the night there, the closest village being still more than a day and a half farther on. Furthermore, I understood perfectly well the character of the rare villages of that region. There are four or five of them dispersed far from one another on the flanks of the hills, in groves of white oaks at the very ends of roads passable by carriage. They are inhabited by woodcutters who make charcoal. They are places where the living is poor. The families, pressed together in close quarters by a climate that is exceedingly harsh, in summer as well as in winter, struggle ever more selfishly against each other. Irrational contention grows beyond all bounds, fueled by a continuous struggle to escape from that place. The men carry their charcoal to the cities in their trucks, and then return. The most solid qualities crack under this perpetual Scottish shower. The women stir up bitterness. There is competition over everything, from the sale of charcoal to the benches at church. The virtues fight amongst themselves, the vices fight amongst themselves, and there is a ceaseless general combat between the vices and the virtues. On top of all that, the equally ceaseless wind irritates the nerves. There are epidemics of suicides and numerous cases of insanity, almost always murderous.

     The shepherd, who did not smoke, took out a bag and poured a pile of acorns out onto the table. He began to examine them one after another with a great deal of attention, separating the good ones from the bad. I smoked my pipe. I offered to help him, but he told me it was his own business. Indeed, seeing the care that he devoted to this job, I did not insist. This was our whole conversation. When he had in the good pile a fair number of acorns, he counted them out into packets of ten. In doing this he eliminated some more of the acorns, discarding the smaller ones and those that that showed even the slightest crack, for he examined them very closely. When he had before him one hundred perfect acorns he stopped, and we went to bed.
     The company of this man brought me a feeling of peace. I asked him the next morning if I might stay and rest the whole day with him. He found that perfectly natural. Or more exactly, he gave me the impression that nothing could disturb him. This rest was not absolutely necessary to me, but I was intrigued and I wanted to find out more about this man. He let out his flock and took them to the pasture. Before leaving, he soaked in a bucket of water the little sack containing the acorns that he had so carefully chosen and counted.

     I noted that he carried as a sort of walking stick an iron rod as thick as his thumb and about one and a half meters long. I set off like someone out for a stroll, following a route parallel to his. His sheep pasture lay at the bottom of a small valley. He left his flock in the charge of his dog and climbed up towards the spot where I was standing. I was afraid that he was coming to reproach me for my indiscretion, but not at all : It was his own route and he invited me to come along with him if I had nothing better to do. He continued on another two hundred meters up the hill.
     Having arrived at the place he had been heading for, he begin to pound his iron rod into the ground. This made a hole in which he placed an acorn, whereupon he covered over the hole again. He was planting oak trees. I asked him if the land belonged to him. He answered no. Did he know whose land it was? He did not know. He supposed that it was communal land, or perhaps it belonged to someone who did not care about it. He himself did not care to know who the owners were. In this way he planted his one hundred acorns with great care.

     After the noon meal, he began once more to pick over his acorns. I must have put enough insistence into my questions, because he answered them. For three years now he had been planting trees in this solitary way. He had planted one hundred thousand. Of these one hundred thousand, twenty thousand had come up. He counted on losing another half of them to rodents and to everything else that is unpredictable in the designs of Providence. That left ten thousand oaks that would grow in this place where before there was nothing.
     It was at this moment that I began to wonder about his age. He was clearly more than fifty. Fifty-five, he told me. His name was Elzéard Bouffier. He had owned a farm in the plains, where he lived most of his life. He had lost his only son, and then his wife. He had retired into this solitude, where he took pleasure in living slowly, with his flock of sheep and his dog. He had concluded that this country was dying for lack of trees. He added that, having nothing more important to do, he had resolved to remedy the situation.
     Leading as I did at the time a solitary life, despite my youth, I knew how to treat the souls of solitary people with delicacy. Still, I made a mistake. It was precisely my youth that forced me to imagine the future in my own terms, including a certain search for happiness. I told him that in thirty years these ten thousand trees would be magnificent. He replied very simply that, if God gave him life, in thirty years he would have planted so many other trees that these ten thousand would be like a drop of water in the ocean.
     He had also begun to study the propagation of beeches. and he had near his house a nursery filled with seedlings grown from beechnuts. His little wards, which he had protected from his sheep by a screen fence, were growing beautifully. He was also considering birches for the valley bottoms where, he told me, moisture lay slumbering just a few meters beneath the surface of the soil.
     We parted the next day.


     The next year the war of 14 came, in which I was engaged for five years. An infantryman could hardly think about trees. To tell the truth, the whole business hadn't made a very deep impression on me; I took it to be a hobby, like a stamp collection, and forgot about it.
     With the war behind me, I found myself with a small demobilization bonus and a great desire to breathe a little pure air. Without any preconceived notion beyond that, I struck out again along the trail through that deserted country.
     The land had not changed. Nonetheless, beyond that dead village I perceived in the distance a sort of gray fog that covered the hills like a carpet. Ever since the day before I had been thinking about the shepherd who planted trees. « Ten thousand oaks, I had said to myself, must really take up a lot of space. »
     I had seen too many people die during those five years not to be able to imagine easily the death of Elzéard Bouffier, especially since when a man is twenty he thinks of a man of fifty as an old codger for whom nothing remains but to die. He was not dead. In fact, he was very spry. He had changed his job. He only had four sheep now, but to make up for this he had about a hundred beehives. He had gotten rid of the sheep because they threatened his crop of trees. He told me (as indeed I could see for myself) that the war had not disturbed him at all. He had continued imperturbably with his planting.
     The oaks of 1910 were now ten years old and were taller than me and than him. The spectacle was impressive. I was literally speechless and, as he didn't speak himself, we passed the whole day in silence, walking through his forest. It was in three sections, eleven kilometers long overall and, at its widest point, three kilometers wide. When I considered that this had all sprung from the hands and from the soul of this one man - without technical aids - , it struck me that men could be as effective as God in domains other than destruction.
     He had followed his idea, and the beeches that reached up to my shoulders and extending as far as the eye could see bore witness to it. The oaks were now good and thick, and had passed the age where they were at the mercy of rodents; as for the designs of Providence, to destroy the work that had been created would henceforth require a cyclone. He showed me admirable stands of birches that dated from five years ago, that is to say from 1915, when I had been fighting at Verdun. He had planted them in the valley bottoms where he had suspected, correctly, that there was water close to the surface. They were as tender as young girls, and very determined.
     This creation had the air, moreover, of working by a chain reaction. He had not troubled about it; he went on obstinately with his simple task. But, in going back down to the village, I saw water running in streams that, within living memory, had always been dry. It was the most striking revival that he had shown me. These streams had borne water before, in ancient days. Certain of the sad villages that I spoke of at the beginning of my account had been built on the sites of ancient Gallo-Roman villages, of which there still remained traces; archeologists digging there had found fishhooks in places where in more recent times cisterns were required in order to have a little water.
     The wind had also been at work, dispersing certain seeds. As the water reappeared, so too did willows, osiers, meadows, gardens, flowers, and a certain reason to live.
     But the transformation had taken place so slowly that it had been taken for granted, without provoking surprise. The hunters who climbed the hills in search of hares or wild boars had noticed the spreading of the little trees, but they set it down to the natural spitefulness of the earth. That is why no one had touched the work of this man. If they had suspected him, they would have tried to thwart him. But he never came under suspicion : Who among the villagers or the administrators would ever have suspected that anyone could show such obstinacy in carrying out this magnificent act of generosity?

     
Beginning in 1920 I never let more than a year go by without paying a visit to Elzéard Bouffier. I never saw him waver or doubt, though God alone can tell when God's own hand is in a thing! I have said nothing of his disappointments, but you can easily imagine that, for such an accomplishment, it was necessary to conquer adversity; that, to assure the victory of such a passion, it was necessary to fight against despair. One year he had planted ten thousand maples. They all died. The next year,he gave up on maples and went back to beeches, which did even better than the oaks.
     To get a true idea of this exceptional character, one must not forget that he worked in total solitude; so total that, toward the end of his life, he lost the habit of talking. Or maybe he just didn't see the need for it.

     In 1933 he received the visit of an astonished forest ranger. This functionary ordered him to cease building fires outdoors, for fear of endangering this natural forest. It was the first time, this naive man told him, that a forest had been observed to grow up entirely on its own. At the time of this incident, he was thinking of planting beeches at a spot twelve kilometers from his house. To avoid the coming and going - because at the time he was seventy-five years old - he planned to build a cabin of stone out where he was doing his planting. This he did the next year.

     In 1935, a veritable administrative delegation went to examine this « natural forest ». There was an important personage from Waters and Forests, a deputy, and some technicians. Many useless words were spoken. It was decided to do something, but luckily nothing was done, except for one truly useful thing : placing the forest under the protection of the State and forbidding anyone from coming there to make charcoal. For it was impossible not to be taken with the beauty of these young trees in full health. And the forest exercised its seductive powers even on the deputy himself.
     I had a friend among the chief foresters who were with the delegation. I explained the mystery to him. One day the next week, we went off together to look for Elzéard Bouffier, We found him hard at work, twenty kilometers away from the place where the inspection had taken place.
     This chief forester was not my friend for nothing. He understood the value of things. He knew how to remain silent. I offered up some eggs I had brought with me as a gift. We split our snack three ways, and then passed several hours in mute contemplation of the landscape.
     The hillside whence we had come was covered with trees six or seven meters high. I remembered the look of the place in 1913 : a desert... The peaceful and steady labor, the vibrant highland air, his frugality, and above all, the serenity of his soul had given the old man a kind of solemn good health. He was an athlete of God. I asked myself how many hectares he had yet to cover with trees.
     Before leaving, my friend made a simple suggestion concerning certain species of trees to which the terrain seemed to be particularly well suited. He was not insistent. « For the very good reason, » he told me afterwards, « that this fellow knows a lot more about this sort of thing than I do. » After another hour of walking, this thought having travelled along with him, he added : « He knows a lot more about this sort of thing than anybody - and he has found a jolly good way of being happy ! »
     It was thanks to the efforts of this chief forester that the forest was protected, and with it, the happiness of this man. He designated three forest rangers for their protection, and terrorized them to such an extent that they remained indifferent to any jugs of wine that the woodcutters might offer as bribes.

     The forest did not run any grave risks except during the war of 1939. Then automobiles were being run on wood alcohol, and there was never enough wood. They began to cut some of the stands of the oaks of 1910, but the trees stood so far from any useful road that the enterprise turned out to be bad from a financial point of view, and was soon abandoned. The shepherd never knew anything about it. He was thirty kilometers away, peacefully continuing his task, as untroubled by the war of 39 as he had been of the war of 14.

     
I saw Elzéard Bouffier for the last time in June of 1945. He was then eighty-seven years old. I had once more set off along my trail through the wilderness, only to find that now, in spite of the shambles in which the war had left the whole country, there was a motor coach running between the valley of the Durance and the mountain. I set down to this relatively rapid means of transportation the fact that I no longer recognized the landmarks I knew from my earlier visits. It also seemed that the route was taking me through entirely new places. I had to ask the name of a village to be sure that I was indeed passing through that same region, once so ruined and desolate. The coach set me down at Vergons. In 1913, this hamlet of ten or twelve houses had had three inhabitants. They were savages, hating each other, and earning their living by trapping : Physically and morally, they resembled prehistoric men . The nettles devoured the abandoned houses that surrounded them. Their lives were without hope, it was only a matter of waiting for death to come : a situation that hardly predisposes one to virtue.
     All that had changed, even to the air itself. In place of the dry, brutal gusts that had greeted me long ago, a gentle breeze whispered to me, bearing sweet odors. A sound like that of running water came from the heights above : It was the sound of the wind in the trees. And most astonishing of all, I heard the sound of real water running into a pool. I saw that they had built a fountain, that it was full of water, and what touched me most, that next to it they had planted a lime-tree that must be at least four years old, already grown thick, an incontestable symbol of resurrection.

     Furthermore, Vergons showed the signs of labors for which hope is a requirement : Hope must therefore have returned. They had cleared out the ruins, knocked down the broken walls, and rebuilt five houses. The hamlet now counted twenty-eight inhabitants, including four young families. The new houses, freshly plastered, were surrounded by gardens that bore, mixed in with each other but still carefully laid out, vegetables and flowers, cabbages and rosebushes, leeks and gueules-de-loup, celery and anemones. It was now a place where anyone would be glad to live.
     From there I continued on foot. The war from which we had just barely emerged had not permitted life to vanish completely, and now Lazarus was out of his tomb. On the lower flanks of the mountain, I saw small fields of barley and rye; in the bottoms of the narrow valleys, meadowlands were just turning green.
     It has taken only the eight years that now separate us from that time for the whole country around there to blossom with splendor and ease. On the site of the ruins I had seen in 1913 there are now well-kept farms, the sign of a happy and comfortable life. The old springs, fed by rain and snow now that are now retained by the forests, have once again begun to flow. The brooks have been channelled. Beside each farm, amid groves of maples, the pools of fountains are bordered by carpets of fresh mint. Little by little, the villages have been rebuilt. Yuppies have come from the plains, where land is expensive, bringing with them youth, movement, and a spirit of adventure. Walking along the roads you will meet men and women in full health, and boys and girls who know how to laugh, and who have regained the taste for the traditional rustic festivals. Counting both the previous inhabitants of the area, now unrecognizable from living in plenty, and the new arrivals, more than ten thousand persons owe their happiness to Elzéard Bouffier.

     
When I consider that a single man, relying only on his own simple physical and moral resources, was able to transform a desert into this land of Canaan, I am convinced that despite everything, the human condition is truly admirable. But when I take into account the constancy, the greatness of soul, and the selfless dedication that was needed to bring about this transformation, I am filled with an immense respect for this old, uncultured peasant who knew how to bring about a work worthy of God.

     Elzéard Bouffier died peacefully in 1947 at the hospice in Banon. 



The short animated film may be viewed by clicking HERE.

“Pangea Proxima visits a genuine organic coffee farm in Nicaragua: Finca Java”

Introduction: A very brief history of coffee:
·850: First known discovery of coffee berries. Legend of goat herder Kaldi of Ethiopia who notices goats are friskier after eating red berries of a local shrub. Experiments with the berries himself and begins to feel happier.
·1100: The coffee first trees are cultivated on the Arabian peninsula.  Coffee is first roasted and boiled by Arabs making “qahwa” — a beverage made from plants.
·1475: The world’s first coffee shop opens in Constantinople. It is followed by the establishment of two coffee houses in 1554.
·1995: Coffee is the world’s most popular beverage. More than 400 billion cups are consumed each year. It is a world commodity that is second only to oil.
   You may drink coffee everyday, but do you know where and how your coffee is produced? Is the coffee you’re drinking organic coffee or is it produced with poisonous pesticides and fertilizers.
   I (Trevor, owner/lead consultant of Pangea Proxima) can tell you that, now after my long weekend stay at Finca Java (FJ) in Nicaragua, when I look down into my daily mug of coffee it appears quite different and there is a an interesting story to be told below the rich blackness.
   I was introduced to Jon Thompson through his one of his inspiring community programs (Comunidad Connect) that he initiated in Southwestern Nicaragua. After discussing our interests in community development, he invited me up to Finca Java, where he is an operator and partial owner. Another owner and founder of the organic coffee farm happened to be another mutual friend of theirs, Chris Robertson (owner of Finca Las Nubes).
   Finca Java, is located about 20 minutes away from the town of Jinotega and is about a five hour drive North from San Juan del Sur, nearly spanning the entirety of Nicaragua. Finca Java is operating in the gorgeous Apanas Lake region, located 80 miles north of Managua Capital city. The lake is at 3,000 feet elevation and the mountains around it rise up to 7,000 feet. It was created as an artificial lake to provide hydroelectric power to the area. 
Panoramic view from the guest cabins at Finca Java
   The area enjoys a wetter climate than much of Nicaragua, and stays green year-round. It is ideal for growing coffee. Many of the farms that they are acquiring currently have organic coffee on some part of the land. Coffee is the most viable cash crop; although all manner of vegetables and fruits can be grown in the region. Annual agricultural returns of up to fifty percent on investment are feasible. A model prospectus is included herein. This area is poised for the development of bed and breakfasts, hotels, lake front restaurants, recreational facilities, as well as building lots and homes to serve the eminent arrival of baby boomers looking for the ideal spot to retire in. The potential for return on this level is unlimited.
Panoramic view from inside the shared dining facilities at Finca Java

Andruw overlooking Finca Java's organic garden
   Finca Java, S.A. was created to provide a vehicle for responsible development. It is creating opportunities for land ownership that are socially, and ecologically responsible, benefits not present in traditional investments. The land would actually produce a positive return on agricultural production alone. They are committed to organic systems which protect the environment and our health. Too many of us are witnessing loved ones dying from cancer due to chemically contaminated food production.
Medicinal Plants at the organic vegetable/fruit garden













These systems also support and protect the eco-systems our grandchildren will depend on. They are also committed to building a social infrastructure that would support increased productivity in a climate of cooperation. Its group of investors includes some of the most visionary and accomplished ecological land use professionals, agronomists and agricultural experts available anywhere. They are all committed to this long term, successful business strategy.
One of many old growth trees on the farm
   FJ grows organic sustainable shade grown coffee. Sustainable coffee is produced on a farm with high biological diversity and low chemical inputs. It conserves resources, protects the environment, produces efficiently, competes commercially and enhances the quality of life for farmers and society as a whole. We are dedicated to a system that enfranchises all involved. Their first concern is for the people for they are the true treasure of Nicaragua. FJ employs a polyculture shade system. This means that we have large shade trees of many varieties at the highest canopy level and banana trees at a lower level. This not only maintains the biodiversity of the forest but also the habitat of the birds and animals.



Chickens contribute to sustainable aspects of the farm
   Coffee (Coffea sp.) is a small understory tree or shrub, and has traditionally been grown amongst forest trees, in the shade.  Coffee grown in the shade, takes long to ripen, and is often thought to taste better because the long ripening times contribute to complex flavors.  In order to produce faster, higher yields and prevent the spread of coffee leaf rust (Hemileia vastatrix), many coffee plantations have begun to grow coffee under sunnier conditions. The fewer shade trees that are in coffee plantations, the less biodiversity there is in those plantations.
The various levels of shade components are seen here: Hardwood trees and banana plants rise above the coffee shrubs
   This loss of biodiversity, especially in birds, has led conscientious consumers to look for “shade grown” coffee.  However, coffee is grown under a continuum of conditions, from rustic or traditional, to full sun, and these “shades of shade” are not all equal when it comes to the health of ecosystems. Unfortunately, there is no official definition of “shade grown,” so coffee so labeled may be grown under what are technically shady conditions, but which are little better than full sun.
Jon inspects coffee berries from this year's harvest
Luscious coffee berries at Finca Java
    



















It is important to understand the various levels of growing coffee under shade.  This lists the five most typical categories, from the most desirable, traditional growing method, to the least diverse, most modern and technified method.
·         Rustic. Often used on small family farms. Coffee is grown  in the existing forest with little alteration of native vegetation.  Shade cover = 70-100%.
·         Traditional polyculture. Farmers plant particular tree and plant species, including fruit and vegetables both for the farmer and for market, fuel wood, medicinal plants, etc. Common tree species under which coffee is frequently grown include Inga, Grevillea, Acacia, Erythrina, and Gliricidia. Shade cover = 40-70%.
·         Commercial polyculture. More trees removed in order to increase the number of coffee plants.  Sometimes involves use of fertilizers and pesticides due to the lack of vegetative cover which helps prevent loss of soil nutrients, etc.
·         Shaded monoculture. Dense plantings of coffee under an overstory of only one or two tree species, which are heavily pruned.  Shade cover = 10-30%. As you can see, coffee grown in a shaded monoculture could technically be labeled “shade grown,” but it would probably not be what the consumer, concerned about biodiversity, is looking for.
   Good Nicaraguan coffees are considered a “classic” cup: great body, clean flavor, and balance. They are unique among Centrals in the fact that the highest grown (SHG grade: Strictly High Grown) do not develop the pronounced and sharp acidity of other Centrals.

Wet and dry mills are critical to the processing of coffee. FJ’s wet coffee mill is located on site and is the place where the ripe coffee cherries are classified by density, and the pulp layer removed by a wet milling machine.
The resulting beans in the parchment are then placed in fermenting tanks for a period that can go from 14 to 40 hours, depending on the relative temperature and climate conditions.
   FJ’s dry mill is located off-site about 30 minutes away and is shared by other smaller area coffee farms. A dry mill or “Beneficio,” as it is called in Spanish, is the plant where the coffee is sun-dried, spread out in concrete or well paved patios for some 10 to 12 days.
Finca Java's Beneficio is shared by other small independent coffee farms and is located off-site
The coffee is then placed to rest in well ventilated warehouses for a period of 45 to 60 days until the beans’ relative humidity is homogenized on the entire lot. This rest period, prior to de-hulling allows for the bean pores to close, which will give it great consistency and hardness that will enable its quality to last longer prior to and after its roasting.
Machines that separate the various sized of beans
Food stand at the beneficio
Coffee beans drying out at the beneficio


















A few important questions are answered below about your choice of coffee:

Why drink organic coffee?
   It is well known that many of the chemicals used on coffee farms are highly carcinogenic and banned by industrialized nations. The World Bank and USAID promoted high tech sun-grown coffee. Farmers were taught to increase the yield and ripen their cherries faster by cutting down the shade trees. Many farmers had no choice because often that was the condition to get bank credit. Cutting down the shade trees reduced the habitat for the birds that controlled pests. So farmers had to use synthetic pesticides. This required the increased use of synthetic fertilizers to give the extra energy taken up by the pesticides. Also, without the shade, the weeds increased and became difficult to control, so the farmers had to use synthetic weed killers. Coffee is one of the most chemical intensive crops. The farmers do not know how to use the chemicals safely and many suffer from health problems caused by chemicals like DDT. Groundwater is contaminated causing further environmental problems. The pulp of the cherries, which constitutes about 60% by weight, is removed to get the coffee beans. This pulp is then thrown into the rivers, which reduces the pH of the water and kills the marine life. Organically grown coffee goes back to the age-old method where coffee is grown under shade trees and pests and weeds are controlled by natural means. One of the greatest ways to use the pulp is to transform it into fertilizer using redworms. This is successfully done at many organic farms. We take the pulp and place it in bins where the worms eat it and turn it to worm castings. We then soak it in water, which is then sprayed as a foliar fertilizer over the plants. Sadly, many businesses use organic labels on products that are not organic. The new certification laws will hopefully reduce this problem. It is believed that coffee roasted at very high temperatures loses all the toxic chemicals, so the use of those chemicals may not be directly harmful to the consumer. Coffee farmers have suffered. We can help them live healthier lives and support our environment by using certified organic products.
Fair Trade coffee bags

Why use Fair Trade Coffee?
   Refer to the section on the plight of coffee farmers. The industry has long taken advantage of poor farmers and farm laborers. It is time to step up and be fair to people who produce the product we love so much. Fair Trade is an international organization that certifies farmers and their cooperatives without any cost to them.
The sellers of their products get to use the Fair Trade seal by paying a certain amount per pound. This money is then diverted to marketing of Fair Trade certified farm products and policing honest use of the seal. By using the Fair Trade seal the seller assures that the farmer is paid at least a minimum base price established by the Fair Trade Organization. This will assure that the farmers can live a dignified life. Fair Trade also makes sure that such farmers and their coops carry out community projects such as schools and health care, and that the farm labor is treated properly. The cost associated with coffee is only $.15/lb, which is less than half a penny per cup of coffee. The time has come to do a little something to help the farmers live a dignified life. Fair Trade Seal.
Beneficio workers (allowed one 15 minute break for every hour worked)
Organic crops at Fica Java
What is Shade-Grown coffee?
   Traditionally, coffee was always grown in the shade under the forest canopy. It was in the 1950s that the World Bank and USAID promoted high tech coffee, the farmers were asked to produce sun-grown coffee in order to increase production. The shade trees were therefore cut down. When the trees were cut down the birds lost their habitat. Without the birds, the worms were not kept under control, farmers had to rely on pesticides.
The coffee plants were stressed from growing in the sun and from the pesticides, to counteract this, chemical fertilizers had to be used. The sun also caused increased weed growth, necessitating use of chemical weed killers. The coffee cherries ripen faster in full sun, the quality of the coffee also became questionable. It is now generally believed that it was a mistake to cut down the trees, and we are now asking the farmers to go back to their age-old shade-grown coffee. The Smithsonian Institute certifies farms as Bird Friendly. The cost of certification is paid by roasters on charge per pound of Bird Friendly certified coffee sold. There are many farmers now growing shade grown coffee but they may not yet be certified.


2009 Presidential visit and speech at Finca Java
   President Daniel Ortega visited Finca Java in 2009 and gave a speech on self-sustainability and organic agriculture. The president called the farm a “fantastic model of diversification”. The theme was women in agriculture and self sufficient food production for Nicaragua. The minister of agriculture had gone looking for model sustainable farms in northern Nicaragua and found Finca Java to be the most impressive. Ambassadors from Switzerland, Taiwan, Luxembourg, ministers of agriculture, education, rural development, etc. and the heads of some UN delegations participated first in a discourse on how to more efficiently help poor farmers. Below is a video of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s visit to the farm in order to promote the importance of organic farming throughout the nation:

Pangea Proxima is in gratitude to Jon Thompson, Chris Robertson and the others at Fica Java for their hospitality and the depth of knowledge shared about their organic farming techniques.
To learn more about Finca Java, its farming methods and investment opportunities please visit www.fincajava.com

Oh yeah...and if you didn't think this place was special enough, where else can you see a white-faced monkey riding goats on a daily basis?
Finca Java's resident white-faced monkey lives with the farm's goats (free to roam) on a full-time basis. The goats consider him to be one of their pack. He ascended to leader of the herd quickly by not only riding the ram (seen pictured), but also by climbing trees and feeding the goats fruits and nuts that he finds. 

“Sprayed by the firehose of wisdom at Fica Las Nubes”

   While living in San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, Trevor Stine (owner/lead consultant of Pangea Proxima) was connected to Chris Robertson (owner of Finca las Nubes) through Austin Drill (mutual friend and the owner/operator of Casa de Tierra). After a couple hours of chatting with Trevor and Andruw Russell (a carpenter and organic farmer from Vermont), Chris invited them to his organic farm located in the hills above town, where there are protected valleys for farming and large open pastures for grazing animals surrounded by natural forest with creeks and waterfalls. Also, there is abundant wildlife including three types of monkeys, sloth, deer and many bird species that may be observed while walking around the farm’s property.
Panoramic view from Finca Las Nubes
   Finca Las Nubes (FLN) is an intentional community. The intent is to create a sustainable lifestyle through partnership with local community. Its goals are to preserve nature for future generations while creating a continually improving, sustainable, self-sufficient and low impact community. Emphasis on stewardship of the land while developing full range of farm products through various sustainable technologies. Everything is made on the farm. It is a certified organic farm, which employs organic permaculture principles to produce a large variety of fruit and vegetables. Partnership with their neighbors is key to the long-term success of the project.
Finca Las Nubes overlooks San Juan del Sur
   FLN strives to learn humility, graciousness and indigenous knowledge of plants and nature from its local neighbors. They hope to inspire and empower others with knowledge, experience and resources to create a better model of how to live on the planet together. Respect is the most important part of all, respect for people, respect for nature and a healthy respect for the rights of future generations. FLN goal is to leave this place a better place than they found it.
Hydroponic gardens
Using fish castings for compost
   FLN is against development that denudes the land, leaves the locals landless and provides no employment for them. It is a recipe for disaster. They are first and foremost dedicated to preserving the environment and helping others do the same, then, to producing all of its own food. They have built a store to bring our healthy organic produce to their neighbors. The people involved with its project are devoted to helping others. They support the development of sustainable farming techniques and the promotion thereof. This totally private farm features hundreds of acres of indigenous forest which are enhanced by their annual planting of thousands of precious hardwood trees. Preservation and reforestation are a priority to creating an abundant future. The wildlife is healthy and protected within it. They have planted fruit orchards with dozens of varieties of citrus, mango, avocado, cashew, banana, papaya, coconut and many other exotic local fruits along with coffee and cocoa. Organic vegetable gardens supply their needs. At the nursery they start from seed and cuttings all manner of fruit, and hardwood trees, ornamental plants and vegetables. FLN imitates nature, while most farmers fight nature. Nature always wins. FLN makes organic microbial soil from worm castings fed from the wood shop shavings, cow and chicken manure and other organic waste. Compost and soil regeneration are key to a healthy farm. FLN employs mulching, composting and water saving techniques through the use of companion plantings, live and dead barriers, nitrogen fixers, organic fertilizers, organic disease control, biological pest control and plants that attract beneficials. There are chicken and turkey pens for organic eggs and meat. FLN has herds of cows, pigs and pelibuey (goat/sheep cross) to provide organic milk and meat. They do not intend on dying from eating chemically tainted foods. FLN has bee hives for honey and pollination. Oxen pull carts to move produce around the farm. The FLN farm crew is like family.
Milled wood from FLN for wood-working projects
   FLN intends to provide for all of its needs. They process all of our their timber for construction and their furniture in its own wood shop. FLN carpenters can produce any imaginable design. They frame their buildings, roof them with incredible tile and make all the cabinets and furniture designs that can be dreamt up. All hardware and metalwork are fashioned onsite. Almost everything is hand-made onsite, butcher, baker, candlestick maker…FLN has a fantastic construction crew building some beautiful and very permanent, stained concrete buildings with gorgeous wood sliding glass doors and windows.
One of the spectacular views from Finca Las Nubes
  In addition to its organic sustainable concepts, FLN has expanded its social sustainable nature by building and staffing a clinic to serve the community without charge. It provides clinic monitoring, medications for the month, nutrition counseling, an exercise session and a visit with our doctor. FLN has  also established a new clinic in a community called Baston. We have done this through a partnership with the Puesto de Salud run by the Ministry of Health (MINSA) and began enrolling diabetics from the surrounding rural area. Finca Las Nubes is designed to provide a base of operations for these projects.
   Pangea Proxima is thankful for its personal invitation to the farm and was truly inspired by the sustainable concepts that Chris Robertson and the inhabitants of Finca Las Nubes have in place and are practicing on a daily basis.
Trevor and Andruw at Finca Las Nubes
Chris Robertson and his granddaughter
















To learn more about Finca de las Nubes please visit www.fincalasnubes.com

“Nicaraguan Potable Water Projects”

   Pure and free drinking water is something that millions of people in industrialized nations all over the world enjoy on a daily basis and take for granted. On the other hand, one billion people in developing nations lack safe drinking water. Every day they risk their lives and health by drinking from contaminated sources.  They are missing out on a basic human right and die from preventable diseases because they do not have local access to free and pure drinking water.
   During Pangea Proxima’s month-long trip to Nicaragua three separate water filtration systems and two different distribution programs were discovered.
   Two of the water filtration systems discovered were being built and distributed throughout the Southwestern Nicaraguan communities by Fundacion Tierra, Newton-San Juan Sister City Project and David St. John. Fundacion Tierra and Newton are organizations based in San Juan del Sur and serve the greater area. David St. John is a retired architect.
Concrete BioSand water filter
   The first water filtration system initiated by the organizations was invented by a Canadian working in Guatemala. His BioSand Filter is a cement box, like a large water-cooler, filled with layers of sand and gravel. Contaminated well water is poured in the top, but as it works its way down through the mass, 100% of the viruses and parasites and 96% of the diarrhea-causing E. Coli bacteria, are trapped and killed. Since 2007 the Newton Workshop has installed over 600 BioSand filters in 30 rural communities around San Juan. The residence report markedly lower levels of illness and the filtered water has a great taste.
   In 2009 and 2010, Fundacion Tierra worked with their colleagues from Newton and NicaCans and established a maintainence program for the hundreds of filters that have been installed over the past 5 years. This program upgrades, repairs and educates the people to insure self sufficient use of the water filters.
    
   The second water filtration system was discovered by Pangea Proxima, coincidentally, when Trevor Stine (lead consultant for Pangea Proxima) traveled to El Encanto (about 2km north of San Juan del Sur) to inspect land that had recently been granted to Pangea Proxima in order to build an experimental straw bale structure. On the same land where the experimental structure is to be built a small workshop exists. Within the workshop a pilot project to manufacture, install and test the efficacy of a new model of BioSand Filter made entirely of lightweight PVC was being inaugurated in the area by David St. John, an architect from the US, and Fundacion Tierra. 
The plans for the newly designed 10-inch PVC BioSand water filter
    The new filter design was brought to the area by David and substitutes a 10-inch PVC pipe in place of the concrete. This design allows for a portable system that may be moved by its users. This is a very important change because the concrete version weighs about 350lbs. Within minutes of seeing and learning about the project, Trevor assisted in building the first dozen filters.
A local volunteer assisting David St. John
Building the first twelve 10-inch PVC BioSand filters for the San Juan del Sur area
   The third filter was discovered by Pangea Proxima, when
Trevor traveled to an organic coffee farm located in small community of Los Robles, located about 20 minutes away from the Northern city of Jinotega, Nicaragua. An organization called Nica Agua is distributing a filtration system utilizes a combination of clay and silver sulfate to filter bacteria and virus from water and is produced by Filtron. This unit is highly portable due to its size and light weight (about 10-15lbs.) 

    



















   Proyecto Nica Agua (PNA) is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing a safe drinking water program into the homes and community of Los Robles, a village in the Jinotega Province of northern Nicaragua. Both community and individual health in this village suffers greatly from the lack of clean drinking water. The mission of PNA is to connect Los Robles residents with the tools, knowledge, and locally obtainable technology (eg. ceramic water filters that can be manufactured locally with local products) so they can provide themselves with clean drinking water on a daily basis, both immediately and in the long term.

User instructions are placed directly on the Filtron to ensure it is utilized correctly

   There is a home and public water component to the Nica Agua program. Twenty households (each typically housing 5-10 people) have been contacted and involved with a pilot program where representatives of NICA AGUA interviews the residents as to their knowledge and capacity to access safe water, test their household water, provide education and information as needed in the household, and provide access to a low tech ceramic water filter. The filter is manufactured locally and may be “earned” by recipients by performing approved community service projects. The children attending the local school have a severe problem with access to safe drinking water. PNA representatives have worked with the school principle and staff and have provided a retrofit of the present water storage system and water filters sufficient for the student population.

Children retrieving water from the larger version which was installed at their school (photo courtesy of Nica Agua)

Community members being instructed on how to filter their well water correctly by Nica Agua staff (photo courtesy of Nica Agua)

Community members receiving their home filter units (photo courtesy of Nica Agua)
   All three of the water filtration systems discussed within this blog are very useful in certain situations. Concrete is normally available everywhere, so this makes the concrete BioSand filter possible in most rural areas of the world. The second BioSand filter, which utilizes PVC piping in place of the concrete, is also very useful because of its portability, but finding 10-inch piping maybe problematic in many rural areas. The last filtration system, is by far the most portable of the three systems, but unless silver sulfate can be obtained locally and the ratio along with the knowledge of how the clay is mixed with the compound and developed into a filter is probably the most difficult of the three to produce from scratch.

To learn more about the concrete BioSand water filter, the Newton Project and Fundacion Tierra please visit http://www.biosandfilter.org/biosandfilter and www.newtonsanjuan.org.

To view the manual for the BioSand water filter please visit: http://www.cawst.org/en/resources/pubs/file/43-pi-for-bsf-manual-complete-english 

To learn more about the Filtron (clay/silver sulfate) filter, and Nica Agua please visit http://www.proyectonica-agua.org.