Before Christmas we went to all the farms in Aranga Coffee Group to take GPS-measurements and visit the farmers. To get an organic certification we need a map of all the farms in the Aranga Coffee Group and their office. All maps will include GPS data, the farmers house, the coffee farm, other farm areas and the neighbours of the farmers. With maps the certification organization will know what is next to the organic coffee, and see the border between organic and non-organic coffee (if the farmer also has some non-organic coffee). With the GPS-measurements we will make a map of the whole village to see the location of the farms together.
Many of the farmers have already done a very good job making maps of their land and in January everything will be ready.
Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Tuesday, 21 October 2014
Barista Training with Union Café
Last week we went to Union Café in Moshi to learn more about different
coffee drinks, café costumers and Union Café's way of roasting and
making coffee. We brought our own coffee and compared our different
roasting types with Union Cafés coffee and talked about the history of coffee production in Tanzania. Thereafter the café's manager
Danford showed us their espresso machine and taught us how to make
espresso and the most popular espresso based drinks. We made our
own cappuccino and had a very good time. Gideoen was the representative from Aranga Coffee Group,
and two of our coffee guides joined us to learn more about coffee after farming.
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
FK 2014
Wild Tracks has started an exchange program with the Norwegian Peace Corps (FK – Fredskorpset) and Friends Fair Trade in Norway. Every year Wild Tracks is sending two workers to Norway to work in Friends Fair Trade’s shop in Oslo, where they also sell our coffee. Friends Fair Trade is sending two workers to Wild Tracks in Tanzania. Here they are learning more about organic and fair trade farming, coffee and the Tanzanian culture and working environment. The workers from Tanzania in Oslo are learning more about Norwegian consumers, Fair Trade and are promoting Wild Tracks’ coffee.
New Brochure
Hurray, we have now made a new brochure for our Coffee Tour!
With our coffee tour we want to show locals and tourists how coffee is produced and show you around in the village where our coffee comes from.
If you want our brochure at your hotel, tourist information centre, in your shop or something else you can send an email to info@wild-tracks.com.
The coffee tour includes:
• Pickup from your location
• Walk through the village
• Guided tour in the coffee farm
• Meet the farmers
• Roast your own coffee
• Visit to the village primary school
• See the oldest church on Mt. Meru
• Homemade Tanzanian lunch
• One bag of coffee to bring home
• 1 bottle of water
• Local guide fee
• Donation to the places you visit
From 35 USD
With our coffee tour we want to show locals and tourists how coffee is produced and show you around in the village where our coffee comes from.
If you want our brochure at your hotel, tourist information centre, in your shop or something else you can send an email to info@wild-tracks.com.
The coffee tour includes:
• Pickup from your location
• Walk through the village
• Guided tour in the coffee farm
• Meet the farmers
• Roast your own coffee
• Visit to the village primary school
• See the oldest church on Mt. Meru
• Homemade Tanzanian lunch
• One bag of coffee to bring home
• 1 bottle of water
• Local guide fee
• Donation to the places you visit
From 35 USD
Farmers Market
Every first Saturday in the month Oikos Arusha arrange Farmers Market in Arusha town. Here you can relax in the green garden with our organic coffee and banana cake, or buy coffee to bring home.
At the market you can also find organic vegetables, Italian cheese, homemade whole grain pasta, Tanzanian wine, bread, cakes, and Tanzanian cosmetics. Karibu sana!
At the market you can also find organic vegetables, Italian cheese, homemade whole grain pasta, Tanzanian wine, bread, cakes, and Tanzanian cosmetics. Karibu sana!
Coffee auction
Aranga Coffee Group sell all their coffee to Wild Tracks every year. They don`t have to worry about selling the coffee at the auction, where the price usually is very low and the competition is high. But according to the Tanzanian law, all coffee produced in the country must go through the coffee auction in Tanzania, because the government wants to keep track of the production in the country.
Wild Tracks and Aranga Coffee Group set a price for the coffee every year, around 3 times higher the average price on the market. After Wild Tracks have bought the coffee we have to bring it to the coffee auction to buy the coffee from ourselves before anybody else buys it.
Wild Tracks go to the coffee auction at The Kahawa House in Moshi, about 1,5 hour from Arusha. Before the auction you get the opportunity to do a cupping of all the coffee. After tasting almost all the coffee for the auction we know for sure that the coffee from the Aranga Coffee Group is worth the money.
Wild Tracks and Aranga Coffee Group set a price for the coffee every year, around 3 times higher the average price on the market. After Wild Tracks have bought the coffee we have to bring it to the coffee auction to buy the coffee from ourselves before anybody else buys it.
Wild Tracks go to the coffee auction at The Kahawa House in Moshi, about 1,5 hour from Arusha. Before the auction you get the opportunity to do a cupping of all the coffee. After tasting almost all the coffee for the auction we know for sure that the coffee from the Aranga Coffee Group is worth the money.
Coffee bags made from Kitenge fabric
All of our prodction is happening in Tanzania and we are employing people from our neighborhood to roast, pack and send the coffee. Our factory is in the village close to the coffee farmers, which makes it easy to meet the farmers and the farmers can easily visit the factory to see what’s going on. In the factory we roast and pack the coffee. We make the coffee bags out of Tanzanian kitenge fabric bought at the market in Arusha. We buy it from local sellers and therefore the colors and patterns change from time to time. We close the coffee bags with banana leaf from the banana trees in our neighborhood.
Friday, 14 February 2014
Karibu - Welcome!
Welcome to
our new blog! Here you can read more about Wild Tracks and our coffee.
Wild Tracks
is a Norwegian-Tanzanian company doing safari and coffee production in Mt.
Meru, Tanzania. We buy green coffee directly from Aranga Coffee Group and make
sure they get a fair price for their coffee. We produce both organic and
conventional coffee.
Since 2008,
we have had our own coffee roasting factory in our village. The coffee is
roasted, grinded and packed in the same village it grows in. By doing all the
coffee processing in Tanzania we create jobs in the community and the money
stays in Tanzania.
We hope
you’ll like reading our blog about our coffee and the Aranga Coffee Group. You
can also visit our webpage and find information in English and Norwegian: http://wild-tracks.com.
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