Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez
374 posts

Luis Rodríguez
@luisedro
God, family, friends and coffee...
Beigetreten Temmuz 2012
360 Folgt286 Follower
Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez retweetet

"Drinking coffee in the morning may be more strongly associated with a lower risk of mortality than drinking coffee later in the day." sprudge.cc/3WdW3e4

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@SpillingTheBean @Lorozco101 Welcome to El Salvador! Stay safe and as much dry you can!
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LIVE #KC from EL SALVADOR, @SpillingTheBean has arrived in San Salvador for this leg of the 2024-25 #coffee crop trip and SOOOOO happy to be on the way to some of the last remaining producing regions with my good friend @Lorozco101 with the INSANE remnants of rains from Tropical Storm Sara and passing throught all the ABANDONED arabica #coffee areas along the road to TOP growing region of St Ana ❤️☕️ 🇳🇮




Maja Wallengren@SpillingTheBean
*BREAKING #KC: LIVE FROM Honduras @SpillingTheBean can confirm that new 2024-25 #coffee harvest in the key Santa Rosa de Copan and Lempira producing regions are coming in min 20-30% below year-ago and many growers reporting 50% drop due to extreme damage from drought and heat which left 80-90% of trees heavily defoliated!!
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Luis Rodríguez retweetet

The "feeding the world" narrative as the main objective for agriculture policy is completely misguided.
Over the past 20 years, global food production has outpaced population growth by ~ 5% – we produce enough food to feed 11 billion people.
Despite this abundance, our food system is plagued by inefficiencies and imbalances.
We waste 1/3 of all the food produced, we burn 10% of the global grain crop for fuel, and for the first time in history more people die from overeating than not eating enough.
Moving forward our primary objective needs to be the production of a diversity of high-quality nutrient dense calories, rather than the overabundance of a handful of sources of calories devoid of essential nutrients.

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@SpillingTheBean Moreover… these rains are not even close to be positive for coffee! We had seen 300mm in about 24 hours and keeps non stop for a few more days, I repeat if not clear this is 15% of a normal yearly rainfall in 24 hours!
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Sadly, much too little rain and MUCH too late to save the 10-20% total #Coffee tree losses across Mexico and Central America which will require full replanting and see no recovery until 2027-28, but the recent rains MAY have stopped lossed at 12-15M bags for 2024-25 world crop !!
Ajoy Thipaiah@AThipaiah
@SpillingTheBean We have been hearing that there are some big rains which the Central American countries will be receiving shortly. May be too little too late but I hope the coffee growing regions get some relief from them.
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Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez retweetet

Superweeds are particularly tenacious plants that have evolved resistance to herbicides due to the overuse of a single herbicide. They’ve gone from almost non-existent to ubiquitous across our farmland.
Roundup-ready crops were engineered to be unaffected by the application of Roundup (glyphosate). The seeds of Roundup ready crops were sold with the promise of reducing herbicide use.
Instead, herbicide use increased dramatically. In the US alone, annual herbicide use increased by 35 million pounds following the widespread adoption of Roundup-ready corn.
Along with this rise in herbicide use, the emergence of superweeds occurred. Today, superweeds spread across well over 60 million acres of US farmland and cause an estimated $43 billion in damage to corn and soybean crops in the US and Canada.
Now, many farmers are using older-generation herbicides that are more toxic, pervasive, and known to volatilize and drift into neighboring fields. Not surprisingly, superweeds are emerging with resistance to these herbicides.
Misaligned incentives drive a poor agronomic model on vast stretches of our most important cropland. One study estimates that farmers could reduce herbicide use by 50% on wheat without any yield loss. Another estimate claims a 90% reduction in herbicides could be achieved by implementing crop rotations and cover crops.
The failed promise of Roundup-ready crops has led to increased herbicide use and the spread of superweeds. The proposed answer is higher rates of more toxic herbicides, proving we haven’t learned the lesson. To truly address this problem, we have to reevaluate our approach to agriculture.

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Luis Rodríguez retweetet

¡Cafecito delicioso por una buena causa! Este finde tenemos un #ElCafédeLosAmigosBF de invitado en nuestra barra gracias a nuestros amigos de Stricta Altura, la Familia Rodríguez Huezo…

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Luis Rodríguez retweetet
Luis Rodríguez retweetet














