email us
— or —
FILL OUT A GREEN COFFEE SELECTION REQUEST

Long Miles Coffee
Interested in buying coffee?
  • Countries
    • Burundi
      • Bukeye
      • Heza
      • Ninga
    • Kenya
    • Uganda
  • Coffee
    • Green Coffee
    • Roasted Coffee
  • Blog
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Impact
    • Projects
      • Before + Now
      • Coffee Scouts
      • Trees for Kibira
Long Miles Coffee

Dirt Roads And Bonus Pay Day

January 24, 2014 by karasscreative

476B1239476B1268It was a long dusty day and we all collapsed at the end of it. We travelled from small village to even smaller village. As we did, I had one of those moments. You probably know the kind of moment I mean. Holding your newborn baby for the first time. Making a big move. Standing in a place that means something to you. That kind of moment. The kind of moment in which will yourself to grow roots and stop time because you recognize that something special is happening.

One of the things we stand for as people and as coffee producers is the dignity and value of every person. For us, paying farmers a premium bonus for their coffee is a major part of recognizing their value as people and coffee growers. When pay day arrived, it was the realization of a big dream.

Since a premium is a bonus payment that is never guaranteed, there was a lot of celebration when we actually showed up. It was a fairly poor coffee season in Burundi in terms of coffee volume and most washing stations barely broke even. During coffee seasons like this one, premiums aren’t really expected and a rarely given. One farmer asked our right hand man Fabrice if “the white people were crazy.” Maybe we are… just a little.

Looking back over these images now, they reassure my shaky heart about our life in Burundi. We just returned from 2 weeks in our well loved South Africa. It will probably always be hard for me to return to Burundi from South Africa. I’ve been lugging around a serious case of the homesick blues all week. It’s not that I am ungrateful for what we’ve got going on in Burundi. Not at all. I wouldn’t trade Burundi for any other place right now, but I left part of my heart in South Africa when we moved from there to here two years ago. Plain and simple.

476B0802Preparations began days before. Burundi money, no matter how you spin it, is dirty. Sometimes damp, moldy, smelly, and in pieces. Stuffing envelopes was an interesting chore.

476B0972

476B1000476B1021476B0960476B1070476B1311476B1334476B1338After paying premium payments in 4 villages, we headed to our washing station. It was one rowdy reunion! Our team, who worked so so so so SO hard to produce great coffee this season, were reunited with each other and the farmers. It was chaos of the happiest kind.

IMG_9004

IMG_8993Getting down to the business of payments.

476B1081

The next crop is rolling in and we are gearing up for round 2. Here. we. go.

This entry was posted in The Washing Stations. Bookmark the permalink.

Post navigation

← Christmas Gifts Of Inspiration
Burundi Coffee Farmer Story: Charles Ndayishimiye →

7 thoughts

  1. Susan Carlson
    January 25, 2014 at 9:08 pm

    Kristy and Ben, plus Fabrice and all your farmers-to God be the Glory!! Your story was powerfully written. The raw hurt, destitute poverty, simple and complete joy along with incredulity-thank you so much for sharing. There is hope for so many now as this new coffee crop grows and matures!

  2. Mike Jarrett
    January 29, 2014 at 6:00 pm

    Looking forward to trying your coffee someday soon! Awesome what you guys are doing….simply brilliant. The world needs more Ben and Kristys.

  3. bruce and cindy knutson
    January 29, 2014 at 6:37 pm

    Ben and Kristy and team,

    The way you have chosen to treat people would make farmers,
    Grandpa and Grandma Knutson, very proud!

    Well done kids,

    Mom and Dad

  4. crystal blackledge
    January 30, 2014 at 3:36 pm

    I love reading your posts. They are so inspiring. You are doing such amazing things there! Thank you for sharing.

  5. Steve
    February 2, 2014 at 1:30 pm

    Way to go LMCP!!! Keep up the great work! Thanks for sharing the journey on your blog.
    Steve
    gabonpilot.blogspot.com

  6. Jason Grube
    February 7, 2014 at 9:41 pm

    Awesome. I’m humble to be a small part of this.

  7. carol Buchanan
    May 3, 2014 at 7:17 am

    Your passion and care are bringing dignity and hope. Thank you for letting others see the journey.

Comments are closed.

Email us Instagram Facebook Twitter Podcast Blog
Long Miles Coffee Project ©2025 All Rights Reserved
Loading
error: