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For every 20 lots of coffee Karl tastes, only 1 makes the cut
for his final container. A direct trading coffee company requires
work. It's not just visiting beautiful coffee farms.
Karl Wienhold has some stories to tell. He frequently has to
take longer routes to coffee farms to prevent contact with leftist
guerrillas that have plagued the country for 60 years.
My favorite story is Karl's effort to change a supply chain and
involve rural farmers in Colombia. Learn about international trade
and specialty coffee:
- How he learned the craft of selecting and cupping coffee
- Explaining the economics of coffee to the end consumer
- Breaking the rules, a few things that he does
different
- Selling in the US, but living outside of it
- Avoiding guerrillas on Karl's coffee travels
- Defining direct trade and vertical direct trade
- Shade grown coffee and the environment
- The man, Jack Swilling (see his bio below)
- On "coyotes": intermediaries and their effect on the coffee and
farmers
- Working through the El Nino catastrophe
Selected Links From The Episode:
Direct Origin
Trading
Swillings
Coffee
Jack
Swilling
About Jack Swilling: "Swilling was a
teamster, prospector, mine and mill owner, a saloon and dance hall
owner. He also was a visionary, a canal builder, farmer, rancher,
and public servant. All of this was accomplished while he suffered
from periods of excruciating pain resulting from major injuries he
suffered in 1854. He took morphine to assuage the pain, which led
to dependency problems for the rest of his life."
Swilling founded the city of Phoenix, Arizona. |