Coffee Tours in Da Lat

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Even if you are not fascinated by coffee, you should keep reading. But if you are into an eco-friendly lifestyle, this article about Da Lat coffee farms will be of interest to you. Love coffee? Then don’t ever miss out on visiting Da Lat! Somebody once told me life is a journey. This journey doesn’t literally mean constant travel, but rather it alludes to the idea that we should enlarge our minds with more places and enhance our hearts with the love we receive and the love we give. In this article, we will walk through several coffee farms in Da Lat to see how a group of us, the Vietnamese, is trying to make an effort on improving the coffee quality, the farmers’ lives, and also the health of our exhausted Earth. I’m sure you will find lots of warmth and love once you are there.

An Overview

We Vietnamese consume coffee on a daily basis. According to the International Coffee Organization, 250,000,000 kilograms of coffee were consumed every day all over the world in 2016, roughly 1,500,000,000 kilograms of fresh beans. Among that huge number, Vietnam is the world second largest coffee exporter. Hence, if your trip to Vietnam is to explore local life, bypassing coffee farms is a big mistake. But which farm to choose? It would be more knowledgeable and worth your trip if you could spot out farms that are following a healthy production standard (Fair Trade Certificate for example)! You will talk to local farmers, feel how they are enjoying their life making an honest living, learning from them about their healthy production processes (a clean standard and without chemical overuse), and, most importantly, figure out how your drinking habit can be for or against Mother Nature.

Among regions that grow coffee in Vietnam, Da Lat is the most accessible and popular for visitors, making it easy for you to join a tour. In 1875, upon realizing that the natural conditions in Da Lat were ideal for the growth of Arabica coffee, the French brought this high-class coffee into town to grow and export worldwide. The region has been home to this superior coffee since then. This glorious past couldn’t secure the coffee industry of the future. Da Lat’s coffee industry deflated during the previous decades due to the out-of-date growing method. Lots of farmers gave up on their farms.

Fortunately, in recent years, a wave of clean coffee production has shaken the stagnation in town, led by La Viet café. Da Lat today is on the move to producing a sustainable, high-quality coffee supply for the global trade. Starbucks has even taken notice and Da Lat coffee is now part of its supply chain. It’s the farmers, traders, officers, and consumers who stand on the side of clean coffee production that made the incredible shift!

In Da Lat, you, in addition to visiting waterfalls, lakes and hills, now have had another different kind of opportunity to blend into nature. Make your time to visit one of the farms mentioned below (or more if you could find), and you will find your heart singing joyfully.

K’ho Farm

Ms. Rolan Co Lieng and Mr. Joshua Guikema (her husband) are the admirable and amazingly enthusiastic founders of this K’ho Farm. With lots of love and passion for K’ho people, Ms. Rolan is determined to make K’ho Coffee well-recognized as a typical high-quality coffee brand in Vietnam and the rest of the world. Apart from growing different types of Arabica, including the exceptional Pacamara species, K’ho coffee ensures the production of their specialty coffee is strictly controlled and manually processed. You can book with them for a day or take a half-day tour to experience the farm, taste the coffee, and learn how people are changing their life with eco-friendly production.

On the tour, I selected the beans. Defected beans must be separated and will be sold to another target market. Those that are qualified will be roasted and stored on shelves as specialty coffee. Tons of beans are selected manually in the cabinet. They are the beautiful result of the whole hard-working year of the K’ho farmers! Ms. Rolan’s mother-in-law (a retired American designer), while selecting the bean with me, pointed over the garden behind the cabinet to show me the coffee plants. ‘Peanuts are grown on the ground. That way, grass won’t be your trouble anymore. Peanut leaves also add more nitrogen to the soil, helping your coffee grow well’, said she. ‘Chemicals are not preferred at all!’

Another K’ho Farm

We were having breakfast in the charming room of Brew and Breakfast Hostel while listening to the owner’s story. He sadly recalled a fire that burnt down all the coffee warehouses weeks ago in K’ho village. It was not Ms. Rolan’s farm, but a neighbor’s. Nick, an English barista who settled down in Da Lat, referred to the fire as the flame of humanity.

Many years ago, the owner of this farm, similar to many other farmers, was not aware of the value of his coffee. He earned a measly living and was not able to support his family life. Fortunately, a charity organization came and instructed him on how to strengthen the production process. At the same time they helped to link farmers and buyers without any intermediaries. His earnings boosted a hundred-fold.

Ironically, this new year of 2018 treated his farm with a terrifying fire in January. The fire didn’t harm anyone, but the whole warehouse, containing their livelihood for the coming year, collapsed. Baristas from top specialty cafes in Saigon, right after the news, actively raised funds to support the farmers. But the magic is larger than that. At the time of the fire, the farm founder was in Lao to help other Laos farmers just the way he was helped before. On receiving the bad news, farms in Lao donated coffee to his farm, totaling up to an amount larger than that was burnt. The warehouse was then rebuilt to a better standard. This is what the power of love, caring, and sharing can do.