Katia Duke’s San Isidro farm is found in a dry and dusty area only a fifteen minute drive from the town of Ruinas de Copán in Copán Department, Honduras. The farm has been in Katia’s family for generations, producing coffee in the traditional way and selling parchment to local intermediaries. She spent most of her youth on the farm before studying agronomy at the prestigious Zamorano Pan-American Agricultural School in San Antonio de Oriente, Francisco Morazán, Honduras. She had grown up dedicated to following the tradition of her parents and family, but the la roya leaf rust epidemic hit Honduras in 2012, destroying most of the crop that year. This blow to coffee production urged Katia to reassess their approach to farming, and change the way that she and her family would think about coffee.
Katia first had to better understand the specialty coffee industry. She took various courses and became a certified barista and roaster. She opened her own coffee shop, where she would roast and sell the coffee from her family’s farm. The next step naturally became growing specialty coffee for export. After much discussion with her father, she was granted plots of land to farm as she saw fit. Now, five years later, these experiments have led to significant rewards.
The rewards of farming never come without struggle though, and Katia has had to work hard to see her plan come to fruition. Her first hurdle was simply to earn respect as a farmer, simply for being a woman. On her first day as a producer only two people, both women, showed up to work the farm with her—everyone else refused to work for a woman. Now, after years of hard work, Katia has developed a strong team at San Isidro built around the principle of mutual respect among everyone.
Katia has not only been able to achieve goals as a coffee producer and develop relationships with roasters, she has also been able to grow into being a leader in her community. The growth of San Isidro and the surrounding area has come hand-in-hand, with flagship projects like building a school and creating and supplying a nutritional program locally. These achievements have meant more than just creating resources though—they’ve proven that in a place that can be dominated by machismo and traditionally male leadership, a woman can succeed as a leader and use coffee as the vehicle to do so.
This lot of Catuai coffee underwent Washed processing. Freshly harvested cherries are depulped and dry-fermented in ceramic lined tanks for 18–24 hours. The coffee is then washed with fresh spring water to remove the remaining mucilage. Washed coffee is dried on either raised beds or concrete patio, depending on weather conditions. Catuai was developed as a cross between Mundo Novo and Caturra by the Instituto Agronomico (IAC) of Sao Paulo State in Campinas, Brazil, and was released originally in Brazil in 1949. Known for its small stature and high productivity potential, the cultivar has spread from Brazil across Central America, accounting today for nearly half of all Arabica production in Honduras.