Sustainable Coffee and Local Farming Realities in Da Lat HuyEc

Saturday - 04/10/2025 09:25
Explore the real-life challenges and hopes of coffee farmers in Da Lat. From strip-picked commercial harvests to raised-bed drying and chemical-free ecosystems — this story reveals what sustainable coffee truly means, and why HuyEco is committed to making it possible.
Sustainable Coffee and Local Farming Realities in Da Lat  HuyEc

Bản dịch tiếng Việt tại đây: Thực tế người trồng cà phê và hành trình bền vững tại Đà Lạt HuyEco | HuyEco.vn

🌿 What’s Behind Your Cup of Coffee? A Farmer’s Reality in Da Lat

October in Da Lat is rainy season. The hills are misty, the soil is wet, and the coffee cherries are slowly ripening. But before harvest begins, there’s something else farmers must do: cut the grass.

At our farm, we don’t use herbicides. That means we have to cut manually — with machines. Even though we plant shade trees and practice biodiversity, grass still grows fast in the rain. And cutting it isn’t cheap.

  • Spraying herbicide costs around 1.000,000 VND per hectare
  • Manual cutting costs 3,000,000 VND per hectare — and we need to do it 3 times during rainy season
  • That’s 9–10 million VND per hectare, nearly 10 times more expensive

This is why most farmers spray. Not because they don’t care — but because they don’t have time or money to do otherwise.


🎥 Video: Grass cutting at a chemical-free coffee farm in Da Lat during rainy season.
Manual work replaces herbicides — a real part of sustainable coffee farming

 

🍒 Why We Sometimes Strip-Pick Coffee

In early harvest season, some cherries ripen before the rest. But when you’re busy cutting grass, you don’t have time to hand-pick only the ripe ones. So we strip-pick in certain areas, dry the cherries on the ground, and sell them to local traders or multinational companies for instant coffee or caffeine extraction.

It’s not ideal. But it’s real.

Early strip-picked coffee cherries drying on concrete yard at a local farm in Da Lat, Vietnam.
Strip-picked early coffee cherries drying on the yard — a common scene at the end of the year, when farmers prioritize grass cutting over selective harvesting. These cherries are usually sold to traders for commercial coffee

🛤️ When Distance Makes Quality Impossible

Some of our partner farms are located far from any processing station. The roads are narrow, sometimes only wide enough for a motorbike. In some cases, farmers must cross rivers or makeshift bridges just to reach their plots.

These farmers live chemical-free, grow with care, and deserve recognition. But the logistics make it nearly impossible to produce high-quality coffee. We wish we could support them more — but we simply can’t reach them.

Their coffee can’t be sold to the specialty market. It goes to commercial buyers, where caffeine matters more than flavor.

Attempting to cross a suspension bridge to visit a remote coffee farm in Da Lat, Vietnam
Crossing a suspension bridge to reach a partner farmer in Da Lat — a reminder of the real challenges in supporting remote coffee growers

💸 The Market Doesn’t Reward Quality — Yet

For most farmers, selling high-quality coffee is nearly impossible. There’s no market access, no infrastructure, no buyer willing to pay more. We’re trying to change that — but our scale is still small.

The global market values caffeine more than craft. That helps farmers survive, because there’s always demand. You just need volume. But it also means:

  • Cherries are dried on bare ground
  • Mold can develop, especially in humid weather
  • Quality drops, and health risks rise
Commercial coffee cherries drying on bare ground, commonly used for decaffeination and mass-market blends.
Commercial-grade coffee drying on the ground — often used for caffeine extraction. A global reality where mold risk is common and quality is no longer the priority.
Coffee cherries drying on raised beds for premium, sustainable processing in Da Lat, Vietnam.
High-quality coffee cherries drying on raised beds — part of our commitment to sustainable, clean coffee production in Da Lat
Handpicked ripe coffee cherries in baskets at a sustainable coffee farm in Chiang Rai, Thailand.
Ripe coffee cherries handpicked and collected in baskets at a farm in Chiang Rai, Thailand — a clear contrast between commercial harvesting and quality-focused sustainable practices.

🌍 The Environmental Cost of Cheap Coffee

To keep costs low, many farmers use herbicides and chemical fertilizers — often in excess. It’s not because they want to harm the land. It’s because they’re trying to survive.

But over time, this affects:

  • Soil health
  • Water quality
  • Consumer safety

We believe sustainability starts with understanding. If consumers know what’s behind their coffee, they can make better choices — and the system can change.

Coffee plants intercropped with avocado, pineapple, and banana trees in a chemical-free ecosystem farm in Da Lat, Vietnam.
Coffee growing alongside avocado, pineapple, and banana — a living ecosystem that thrives without herbicides.
Green coffee farm in Da Lat cultivated without herbicides, reflecting farmers’ desire for sustainable production despite market barriers.
A lush coffee farm in Da Lat grown without herbicides — farmers here are eager to produce sustainable coffee, but market limitations make it nearly impossible

 

We know that to truly support farmers, our business model must grow. And for that, we need a wider, more conscious market — one that values not just caffeine, but the people and ecosystems behind every bean.

If you’d like to be part of this journey, we invite you to visit us in Da Lat — to taste, to listen, and to see how sustainable coffee begins.

Living Exhibition of HuyEco Coffee & Culture
Living Exhibition of HuyEco Coffee & Culture
HuyEco Cafe in Dalat
HuyEco Cafe in Dalat city

📍 HuyEco Coffee & Culture
HuyEco Coffee & Culture, Alley 29, 3/4 Street, Ward 3, Da Lat, Vietnam
📌 View on Google Maps
🌿 Book a Coffee Tour: 1-hour tasting or half-day farm visit
🌍 Tour Info
📦 Order Our Coffee
📹 YouTube: HuyEco Coffee & Culture
 

🔗 Internal Links (on huyeco.vn)

1. Order Coffee

Description: Buy clean, chemical-free coffee directly from Da Lat — handpicked, raised-bed dried, and farmer-sourced.

2. Coffee Tour

Description: Join a guided coffee experience in Da Lat — from farm to cup, with real farmers and real stories.

3. Blog

Description: Read more behind-the-scenes stories from the farm — sustainable coffee through every season.

🌍 External Links 

1. Google Maps – HuyEco Coffee & Culture

Description: Find our café and living exhibition space in Da Lat — where coffee meets community.

2. Specialty Coffee Association – Sustainability Resources

Description: Global guidelines and tools for sustainable coffee production and ethical sourcing.

3. Perfect Daily Grind – Coffee Farming Realities

Description: In-depth articles on the challenges and truths of coffee farming around the world.

 

All articles, images and videos in this article are copyrighted by HuyEcovn, please do not use for other purposes.
In case you want to use the materials for non-profit community purposes, please contact the author at email address: huyeco1125@gmail.com
Sincerely

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