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jayuya, puerto rico -- For 100 years, the Atienzas have grown coffee on an intensely green mountainside among the island’s highest peaks. Their 340-acre plantation is one of the last strongholds ...
Hector Muñoz owns a coffee farm in San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico, and hurricanes aren’t the only natural disasters he’s worried about. “If a drought comes it could be catastrophic,” he said.
Hector Muñoz owns a coffee farm in San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico, and hurricanes aren't the only natural disasters he's worried about. "If a drought comes it could be catastrophic," he said.
The majority of Puerto Rico’s coffee is grown along the island’s central mountain region, but many of those farms have been abandoned. Only about 4,000 coffee farmers are left, compared to ...
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Coffee production in Puerto Rico has hit the lowest level ever in the island's history, leaving farmers and government officials worried about how to revive a once ...
Puerto Rican coffee farmers lost an estimated 85% of their crops, or some 18 million coffee trees valued at $60m (£46m), and many have lost their homes in the wake of hurricanes Irma and María.
San Juan, May 29 (EFE). — Puerto Rico’s agritourism initiative includes visits to coffee plantations where visitors can share in the experience of harvesting the beans.One of… ...
After Puerto Rico’s coffee industry took a massive hit in the wake of the hurricane, an Albuquerque coffee house is stepping up to help. Skip to content KRQE NEWS 13 - Breaking News, Albuquerque ...
Hurricane Fiona damaged Puerto Rico's plantain crops, like this field in Guánica, Puerto Rico. ... Banana, papaya and coffee fields were also battered by the storm.
Puerto Rican coffee farmers lost an estimated 85% of their crops, or some 18 million coffee trees valued at $60m (£46m), and many have lost their homes in the wake of hurricanes Irma and María.
Hector Muñoz owns a coffee farm in San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico, and hurricanes aren’t the only natural disasters he’s worried about. “If a drought comes it could be catastrophic,” he said.
Thousands of rural families in Puerto Rico's rugged central mountains want to rebuild their traditional coffee economy after the devastation of Hurricane Maria. And one year on, they're betting on ...
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