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Overview
The Salaverría sisters, Anabella and María Alicia, are the proud and
dedicated owners of Finca Cerro de Oro. Their childhood was full of
coffee experiences: “The love for coffee has been part of our family
legacy, and our best teacher has been our father”. Since they were very
young, they accompanied him to watch over the plantations, check the
labors and spent their whole vacations and holidays in the family’s mill
located in Salcoatitán, a little town in the Sonsonate department. These
days, all this knowledge is being passed on to their own daughters, Ana
Paola and Cristina Leonor, so that they learn to love their coffee, the
farm, and the people that work in, so that they keep their legacy.
Cerro de Oro was acquired more than 90 years ago and was baptized by
the sister’s great grand father, Francisco Salaverría, who was one of
the coffee growing pioneers in the Juayúa area. Since then, the farm has
been in the family’s hands, and has passed from generation to
generation, until in 1991 their father Julio Cesar Salaverría passed the
farm to them, and last year gave them both total management and rights
over the farm.
The lot was personally selected to participate in this year’s CoE and
came from a smaller plot of the farm called “Orizabal”. They chose this
specific plot because it’s 100% bourbon and grown at an altitude of
1,390 masl. The lot was harvested at the cherry’s optimum ripeness and
was sent daily to the mill during 3 days. As owners, Anabella and María
Alicia attribute the farm’s success at this year’s CoE to various
reasons, but the most important are the harvesting practices, the soil,
and the detailed labor of the pickers.
Their projects for this year include the repair of the farm manager’s
house, and the various water tanks they use to provide the other three
families that live in the farm. Also they plan on buying ecofriendly-kitchens
for all of them. 20 people live inside the farm, and 90 people work
there at harvest time.
Additional information
Coffee varieties: Bourbon
Type of Shade: Ingas, Guachipilin, Chilamate, Oak, Cipress, Copalchi,
Cedar, etc.
Average Annual Rainfall: 3,500 mm
Average Temperature: 20º C
Type of Soil: Clayish loam
Annual Production: (60kg) 540 bags
Mill and company where lot was process: Cooperativa Cuzcachapa de R.L.
Other crops: Bananas Fauna: Birds: Woodpeckers, talapos, gualcachias,
doves, Magpie, Torogoz. Small mammals: Taltuza, Rabbit, Squirrels, etc.
GPS Coordinates:
Latitude: N 13º 50’ 36.1’’
Longitude: W 89º 46’ 42.9’’
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