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The
cultivation of coffee is a leading industry in Costa Rica,
and has long been a source of prosperity. It was begun a
hundred years ago; a few plants having been brought from New
Granada, and the first trial being successful, it has
rapidly extended. All the coffee is grown in the plain of
San Jose, where the three principal towns are
situated—about two-thirds being produced in the environs
of the capital, a fourth in those of Hindia, and the
remainder at Alhajuela, and its vicinity. The land which has
been found by experience to be best suited to coffee is a
black loam, and the next best, a dark-red earth--soils of a
brown and dull yellow color being quite unsuitable. The
plain of San Jose is mostly of the first class, being, like
all the soils of Central America, formed with a large
admixture of volcanic materials. Contrary to the experience
of Java and Arabia, coffee is here found to thrive much
better, and produce a more healthy and equal berry on plain
land, than upon hills, or undulating slopes, which doubtless
arises from the former retaining its moisture better, and
generally containing a larger deposit of loam.
A
coffee plantation in Costa Rica produces a crop the third
year after it is planted, and is in perfection the fifth
year. The coffee trees are planted in rows, with a space of
about three yards between each and one between each plant,
resembling in appearance hedges of the laurel bay. The weeds
are cut down, and the earth slightly turned with a hoe,
three or four times in the year; and the plant is not
allowed to increase above the height of six feet, for the
facility of gathering the fruit. The coffee tree here begins
to flower in the months of March and April, and the berry
ripens in the plains of San Jose in the months of November
and December, strongly resembling a wild cherry in form and
appearance, being covered with a similar sweet pulp.
As soon
as the crimson color assumed by the ripe fruit indicates the
time for cropping, numbers of men, women, and children are
sent to gather the berry, which is piled in large heaps, to
soften the pulp, for forty-eight hours, and then placed in
tanks, through which a stream of water passes, when it is
continually stirred, to free it from the outer pulp; after
which it is spread out on a platform, with which every
coffee estate is furnished, to dry in the sun; but there
still exists an inner husk, which, when perfectly dry, is,
in the smaller estates, removed by treading the berry under
the feet of oxen; and in the larger, by water-mills, which
bruise the berry slightly to break the husk, and afterwards
separate it by fanners.
The
coffee tree bears flowers only the second year, and its
blossoms last only 24 hours. The returns of the third year
are very abundant; at an average, each plant yielding a
pound and a-half or two pounds of coffee.
The
same families for have owned the largest coffee estates of
Costa Rica over a century. Costa Rican coffee is considered
some of the finest in the world and generally only makes up
a small percentage of the beans in most blends due to its
higher cost compared to coffee of a lesser quality coming
out of Brazil.
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