Plantation Coffee

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The Plantation Tour Whole Bean $55 A flavorful journey through exotic coffees from every corner of Costa Rica! A 12 oz. bag each of Café Britt’s Tarrazu, Tres Rios, Organic Shade Grown, and Poas gourmet coffees in a s |
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The Plantation Tour Ground $55 A flavorful journey through exotic coffees from every corner of Costa Rica! A 12 oz. bag each of Café Britt’s Tarrazu, Tres Rios, Organic Shade Grown, and Poas gourmet coffees in a s |
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My Little Coffee Plantation $12.5 My Little Coffee Plantation |
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Coffee, from Plantation to Cup $26.36 Coffee, from Plantation to Cup |
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Coffee; From Plantation To Cup $26.36 Coffee; From Plantation To Cup |
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Coffee Plantation in the Penang Regencies $39.99 Coffee Plantation in the Penang Regencies – Giclee Print |
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Workers on a Coffee Plantation $49.99 F.m. Reynolds Workers on a Coffee Plantation – Giclee Print |
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Hydrangeas in Bloom at a Coffee Plantation $39.99 Karen Kasmauski Hydrangeas in Bloom at a Coffee Plantation – Photographic Print |
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Plantation $66.91 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles A plantation is a large farm or estate, usually in a tropical or subtropical country, where crops are grown for sale in distant markets, rather than for local consumption. The term plantation is informal and not precisely defined. Crops grown on plantations include cotton, coffee, tobacco, sugar cane, sisal, and various oil seeds and rubber trees. Farms that produce alfalfa, Lespedeza, clover, and other forage crops are usually not called plantations. The term plantation has usually not included large orchards, but has included the planting of trees for lumber. A plantation is always a monoculture over a large area and does not include extensive naturally occurring stands of plants that have economic value. Because of its large size, a plantation takes advantage of economies of scale. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Timpledon, Miriam T./ Marseken, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 80 Publication Date: 2010/05/19 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.19 inches |
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Stairway Through the Jungle at Coffee Plantation $39.99 Richard Nowitz Stairway Through the Jungle at Coffee Plantation – Photographic Print |
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Tata Coffee Plantation Trails $113.78 Tata Coffee Plantation Trails is located in Polibetta. Hotel Features. The hotel serves a complimentary breakfast. Room service is available. Tata Coffee Plantation Trails features tour/ticket assistance and dry cleaning/laundry services. Guest parking is complimentary. Guestrooms. All guestrooms at Tata Coffee Plantation Trails feature irons/ironing boards. Televisions have satellite channels. |
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Honduras,Copan, Coffee Plantation, Jungle Flower $39.99 Richard Nowitz Honduras,Copan, Coffee Plantation, Jungle Flower – Photographic Print |
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Stairway Through the Jungle at Welchez Coffee Plantation $39.99 Richard Nowitz Stairway Through the Jungle at Welchez Coffee Plantation – Photographic Print |
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Padmas Plantation Urban Coffee Table $586 Free Shipping. Shown in Natural Antique finish.Rattan peel weave and plantation grown hardwood take on a contemporary look with the Urban Coffee Table. Product info furnished by Carolina Rustica |
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Kona Coffee Beans Drying in the Sun, Greenwell Coffee Plantation, Kona, Hawaii $19.99 Ethel Davies Kona Coffee Beans Drying in the Sun, Greenwell Coffee Plantation, Kona, Hawaii – Photographic Print |
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Ripe Coffee Berries, Kona Joe’s Coffee Plantation, Kona, Hawaii $19.99 Ethel Davies Ripe Coffee Berries, Kona Joe’s Coffee Plantation, Kona, Hawaii – Photographic Print |
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Coffee Beans, Coffee Plantation and Museum, Museo del Cafe, Antigua, Guatemala $24.99 Cindy Miller Hopkins Coffee Beans, Coffee Plantation and Museum, Museo del Cafe, Antigua, Guatemala – Photographic Print |
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The Plantation… $20.13 The Plantation… |
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On the Plantation $19.47 On the Plantation |
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"Brighten Your Day" Tisane Gift Tin $33.95 Our "Brighten Your Day" tisane gift tin combines three of our original tisanes from our Kualapu’u plantation. Coffee cherry – Lavender – Jasmine Green Tea. These blends will enliven your spirit and refreshen your mood. Let the sunshine in! As with our coffee gift tins, we can customize selections, send to multiple addresses and recipients. Whatever you require. Just let us know! |
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"Mellow Your Day" Tisane Gift Tin $33.95 Our "Mellow Your Day" tisane gift tin combines three of our original tisanes from our Kualapu’u plantation. Coffee cherry – lemongrass – Mamaki Ginger. These blends will soothe, calm and heal your being. At peace with your surroundings! As with our coffee gift tins, we can customize selections, send to multiple addresses and recipients. Whatever you require. Just let us know! |
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100% Molokai Coffee Gift Tin $41.75 Our Estate gift tin presents three 1/2 pound bags of our top-sellers from our Kualapu‘u plantation. A bag each of our Moloka‘i Island Princess, Malulani Estate, and Hawaiian Espresso – Moloka‘i Style. Experience a range of taste characteristics that can only be created from the soils of Moloka‘i – from the ‘aina. |
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35 Cinnamon Dark Coffee Plantation Mango Wood Rectangular Beveled Wall Mirror $309.99 Cinnamon and Dark Coffee Finish Wall Mirror Item #05013 Features a frame made of Plantation mango wood finished in a cinnamon stain and accented with a dark coffee glaze Mirror is beveled Includes proper hanging hardware (J-hook and nails) Features the latest technology to seal the mirror back from the elements, resulting in no deterioration Heavily sealed finish, suitable for bathroom use if desired Overall dimensions: 35 H x 24 W x 3 D Mirror/glass dimensions: 32 H x 20 W Material(s): mango wood/glass/mdf/hand applied finish |
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A Blockaded Family – Life in Southern Alabama During the Civil War $39.45 This reminiscence of daily life on a Southern plantation during the Civil War was originally published in 1888. The book is filled with vivid details of everything from methods of making dyes and preparing foods to race relations and the effects of the war. A Blockaded Family is an unusual and beautifully-written primary source of Southern life inside the blockade, told from a point of view that is decidedly different from most post-war accounts. Contents Include: Beginnings of the Secession Movement A Negro Wedding Devices Rendered Necessary by the Blockade How the South Met a Great Emergency War Time Scenes on an Alabama Plantation Southern Women Their Ingenuity and Courage How Cloth was Dyed How Shoes, Thread, Hats and Bonnets Were Manufactured Homespun Dresses Home-Made Buttons and Pasteboard Uncle Ben Aunt Phillis and her Domestic Trials Knitting around the Fireside Tramp, Tramp of the Spinners Weaving Heavy Cloth Expensive Prints “Blood Will Tell” Substitutes for Coffee Raspberry |
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A Blockaded Family – Life in Southern Alabama During the Civil War $61.35 This reminiscence of daily life on a Southern plantation during the Civil War was originally published in 1888. The book is filled with vivid details of everything from methods of making dyes and preparing foods to race relations and the effects of the war. A Blockaded Family is an unusual and beautifully-written primary source of Southern life inside the blockade, told from a point of view that is decidedly different from most post-war accounts. Contents Include: Beginnings of the Secession Movement A Negro Wedding Devices Rendered Necessary by the Blockade How the South Met a Great Emergency War Time Scenes on an Alabama Plantation Southern Women Their Ingenuity and Courage How Cloth was Dyed How Shoes, Thread, Hats and Bonnets Were Manufactured Homespun Dresses Home-Made Buttons and Pasteboard Uncle Ben Aunt Phillis and her Domestic Trials Knitting around the Fireside Tramp, Tramp of the Spinners Weaving Heavy Cloth Expensive Prints Blood Will Tell Substitutes for Coffee Raspberry |
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A Month in the Jungle $16.95 Henry Cooper, an aspiring San Francisco screenwriter, has his first real writing job scripting a B-movie. The melodramatic story takes place on a coffee plantation in Africa during WWI, and although it isn’t what Henry would call art, it’s a potential break for his early career. |
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Africa and the African Diaspora: Cultural Adaptation and Resistance $19.99 Africa and the African Diaspora is the outcome of a symposium held at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon (February 2002), entitled “Symposium on Freedom in Black History,” designed to celebrate Black History Month. The major themes of the conference were how Africans both at home on the continent and dispersed abroad, often by forces beyond their control, reacted to oppression and subjugation in seeking freedom from slavery, colonialism, and discrimination. The volume documents the many forms that oppression has taken, the many forms that resistance has taken, and the cultural developments that have allowed Africans to adapt to the new and changing economic, social and environmental conditions to win back their freedom. Oppressive strategies as divide-and-rule could be based on any one of a number of features, such as skin color, place of origin, culture, or social or economic status. People drawn into the vortex of the Atlantic trade and funneled into the sugar fields, the swampy rice lands or the cotton, coffee or tobacco plantations of the new world and elsewhere, had no alternative but to risk their lives for freedom. The plantation provided the context for the dehumanization of disadvantaged groups subjected to exhausting work, frequent punishment and personal injustice of every kind,This book demonstrates that the history and interpretation of these struggles of the oppressed peoples to free themselves have not received proportionate attention and analysis, as have other aspects of that history. For example, although Maroon societies or “runaways”, formed colonies of core communities that fought won and preserved freedom in the New World and became the symbol of a special type of nationalism they have never been fully depicted as such in that role in World History and culture. In the discussion of freedom and the activities accompanying it in historical times, we often overlook the minor currents that accompany its attainment either at its in |
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Agricultural Economics $31.4 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Primary Sector of the Economy, List of Subsistence Techniques, Common Agricultural Policy, Corporate Farming, Family Farm, Wood Economy, Kangchu System, Vertical Farming, Private Landowner Assistance Program, Food Systems, Christmas Tree Production, Land Banking, Economics of Coffee, Weston A. Price Foundation, Community-Supported Agriculture, Christmas Tree Production in Canada, Grain Trade, Agricultural Cooperative, Vernon Wesley Ruttan, Open Field System, Peak Wheat, Commodities Exchange, Plantation Economy, Household Plot, National Agricultural Policy Center, Instituto de Economia Agrícola, Commodity Credit Corporation, Citrus Industry in the Caribbean, Cash Crop, Agreement on Agriculture, Pigford V. Glickman, Capri Model, Small Farm, Agribusiness, Second Green Revolution, Solidal Purchasing Groups, Land Economy, Drought Tolerance, Pork Cycle, Subsistence Agriculture, Agricultural |
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Amedei 24pc ’9′ Dark Chocolate Samples 20g $39.5 Amedei’s unique signature ’9′ blend involved years of research and of discovering and restoring nine key cocoa plantations whose special beans, blended and refined according to Amedei’s exacting formula, become a strong and balanced dark chocolate whose taste expresses the distinctive and nuanced qualities of each plantation. Just as a fine scotch whiskey benefits from the best balance of key ingredients, so does the ’9′. You will savour a unique, tantalising journey of exquisite and sometimes surprising flavour notes, such as cherry and molasses, clove, blueberry, coffee and earthy/grassy tones. The ’9′ blend first heralded Amedei’s emergence as a world force in chocolate making and is a true connoisseur’s chocolate. |
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Amedei Signature ’9′ Blend Dark Chocolate 12 Bar Case 50g $138 Amedei’s unique signature ’9′ blend involved years of research and of discovering and restoring nine key cocoa plantations whose special beans, blended and refined according to Amedei’s exacting formula, become a strong and balanced dark chocolate whose taste expresses the distinctive and nuanced qualities of each plantation. Just as a fine scotch whischokinagey benefits from the best balance of key ingredients, so does the ’9′. You will savour a unique, tantalising journey of exquisite and sometimes surprising flavour notes, such as cherry and molasses, clove, blueberry, coffee and earthy/grassy tones. The ’9′ blend first heralded Amedei’s emergence as a world force in chocolate making and is a true connoisseur’s chocolate. |
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Amedei Signature ’9′ Blend Dark Chocolate 6 bar pack 50g $69 Amedei’s unique signature ’9′ blend involved years of research and of discovering and restoring nine key cocoa plantations whose special beans, blended and refined according to Amedei’s exacting formula, become a strong and balanced dark chocolate whose taste expresses the distinctive and nuanced qualities of each plantation. Just as a fine scotch whischokinagey benefits from the best balance of key ingredients, so does the ’9′. You will savour a unique, tantalising journey of exquisite and sometimes surprising flavour notes, such as cherry and molasses, clove, blueberry, coffee and earthy/grassy tones. The ’9′ blend first heralded Amedei’s emergence as a world force in chocolate making and is a true connoisseur’s chocolate. |
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Amedei Signature ’9′ Blend Dark Chocolate Napolitains 12 Piece Gift Box 4 boxes 55g $138 Twelve napolitains of Amedei’s unique signature ’9′ blend. Amedei’s ’9′ involved years of research and of discovering and restoring nine key cocoa plantations whose special beans, blended and refined according to Amedei’s exacting formula, become a strong and balanced dark chocolate whose taste expresses the distinctive and nuanced qualities of each plantation. Just as a fine scotch whischokinagey benefits from the best balance of key ingredients, so does the ’9′. You will savour a unique, tantalising journey of exquisite and sometimes surprising flavour notes, such as cherry and molasses, clove, blueberry, coffee and earthy/grassy tones. The ’9′ blend first heralded Amedei’s emergence as a world force in chocolate making and is a true connoisseur’s chocolate. |
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Among The Ibos Of Nigeria $20.75 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:CHAPTER II THE IBO COUNTRY In 1900, Onitsha had not aspired to anything approaching its present importance, and it retained much of its primitive simplicity. The commercial centre of the district was at Abutshi, two or three miles down-stream, and the administrative quarters, first of the Royal Niger Co., and later of the Government, were at Asapa, on the western side of the river. To the north of the town, following the left bank of the Nkissi stream, on the site now covered with Government buildings, a large coffee plantation was laid out. Of the surrounding country, even of that comparatively near the settlement, but little was known. The existing maps were useless as none contained reliable data, the names inserted being based upon reports and conjectures. Some names were curious e.g. ” Akpam ” and ” Nri.” The latter certainly is a name well known over a considerable portion of the Ibo country. It is the name of a small town which is the headquarters of a priestly cult whose special functions are connected with the coronation of kings, hence “nri” men (priests) being travellers, were met with frequently. When asked whence they came the answer was a wave of the hand towards the east, and thus the name was given, in mistake, to the whole country lying east of Onitsha. It is only during the last few years, i.e. since the British Government assumed the administration, that appreciable progress has been made in opening up the interior districts. At the time of my landing at Onitsha there was anattractive field for investigation in which the native could be studied in his primitive environment. The subsequent years have been equally interesting, but from anotherstandpoint, viz., that of a spectator watching a nation passing through a period of transition. The process |
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An Archaeology of Social Space $40.81 In An Archaeology of Social Space, James A. Delle examines the cognitive and material records of spatial design and use – including maps, architectural drawings, landscapes, and historical treatises – of three coffee plantations in the Yallahs drainage of eastern Jamaica. Using the data collected from these sources, he considers such issues as: The rise and fall of the Jamaican coffee industry, and how this fluctuation was influenced by events in the larger world economy; how economic changes resulted in the creation of new social and material spaces in highland Jamaica; and the ways in which these spaces served as an arena for the negotiation of power in a plantation context, both before and after the abolition of slavery. Professionals, researchers, and students in archaeology, anthropology, history, sociology, and economics, will find this a unique and extremely valuable work. |
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Annie’s Rainbow $0.01 FERN MICHAELS has thrilled countless readers with her compelling, passionate tales of love, loss, and renewal. Now she surpasses herself with an unforgettable new novel. The same twist of fate that makes a woman rich beyond her wildest dreams propels her towards unexpected danger and the real treasure waiting at the end of…It came out of the blue. A half-million dollars on graduation day. For Anna Daisy Clark, it was the capital she needed to start a business and secure her future. It was also money that didn’t belong to her. Vowing to pay back every penny of it one day, she kept the bag of cash she’d found, and never looked back.Ten years later, Annie’s investment has paid off. The owner of a successful chain of elegant coffee bars, she is blissfully engaged to handsome coffee plantation owner Parker Grayson, and about to return triumphant to Boston for her 10th college reunion. She also begins making good on her promise to return the five hundred thousand dollars with anonymous monthly payments.But just as Annie’s life seems complete, the dark history of the money returns to haunt her. Someone is determined to solve the mystery of a ten-year-old bank robbery and an enraged thief who has served his time is coming to reclaim his loot. Suddenly, Annie is plunged into the chaos of a deadly chase, forced to use all her wits to keep her world from unraveling, and from losing the one thing she values most — the priceless gift of l |
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Arbora Teak Bristol Teak Coffee Table $199 ARB1017 Features: Crafted from Grade A solid teak from plantation grown in Indonesia Solid brass hardware Utilize mortise and tenon joinery method Classic Design with modern touch Design for outdoor yet perfect for Indoor Requires little maintenance Color/Finish: Natural finish |
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Arsenic and Rio $6.99 When Marshall met Hal, it was a match made in hell. Hal is a first class con man and manipulator. Marshall is the perfect pawn, a young guy who has been abused all his life, with no self confidence. Hal is pure evil, and he recognizes gold when he sees it. Marshall is handsome, gay and desperate to be loved and accepted. Hal is a former resident of the detention center where Marshall is living. He knows the unscrupulous director, who is deeply in debt with the mob. When the director is asked to do the mob a favor, a job that will set Hal up for life, Hal recruits Marshall to help him carry out his diabolic scheme. When Marshall meets the handsome young owner of a coffee plantation, his job is to seduce him, and secure the plantation for the mob. Marshall doesn’t truly understand that Angelo will have to die. Marshall is completely unprepared for Angelo, and completely unprepared for love, something in his sad life, he has never known. Hal is in the background making sure Marshall doesn’t stray from the plan–a plan that will succeed only if Marshall kills the man he loves. Passion and despair reign as Arsenic and Rio sweeps the reader away to a coffee plantation high in the mountains of Brazil, and to the warm sands of Rio. |
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Black Sheep’s Daughter $5 Teresa Danville, raised in Costa Rica by her “black sheep” father, presents a challenge to the diplomatic skills of Sir Andrew Graylin. Niece of an English duke, Teresa was not raised to London society, but to wielding pistols and overseeing a coffee plantation household. Bringing this exotic beauty (along with her brother and her parrot) to civilization gets the previously affianced Sir Andrew in deep trouble. |
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Bouki’s Honey $15 Come share in the rich, Creole Culture of Louisiana, cher! Learn (French Creole) and laugh — with the humorous, Creole characters “Bouki and Lapin” “The Creole Folktales of Compaire Bouki and Compaire Lapin” have a rich and fascinating history, hundreds of years old. The tales originated from Senegal, Africa and according to the historical, Louisiana Creole Plantation ‘Laura’, they were first recorded in the United States – in Laura Plantation’s 150-year-old cabins. Lapin’s adventures (‘Lapin’ means “rabbit” in French) soon went on to become the popular American Tales known as ‘Br’er (Brother) Rabbit’ – only ‘Compaire Bouki and Compaire Lapin’ retain the original, unique French Creole ‘flavor’. (In French folklore, ‘compaire/compair’ means brother.)In various Louisiana stories Bouki is pictured as a donkey, raccoon or wolf. You’ll get to meet ‘Bouki the donkey’, in “Bouki’s Honey”. Bouki was a ‘hyena’ in the original African folktales. The name ‘Bouki’ is a ‘wolof ‘ word – ‘wolof ‘ being both the language and the people of Senegal , Africa – and is said to mean, “stupid hyena”. Some even say ‘Bouki’ is a play on words meaning, “bookish” (something the character never is). It is believed that the Senegal slaves brought to Louisiana, actually told the African-based stories of ‘Bouki and Lapin’ as code, to illustrate victory over the conditions of slavery – with Lapin humorously outwitting plantation owner, ‘Bouki’. Thus we have ‘a bit of history and a lot of humor’, with the colorful tales of ‘Lapin’ – the clever, trickster rabbit, and ‘Bouki’, the slow-witted donkey. Today, ‘Compaire Bouki and Compaire Lapin’ continue to bepopular, French Creole folktales passed from generation to generation — and enjoyed by ages one to 101.*Note: Coming in late 2007-Bouki and Lapin merchandise – t-shirts, coffee mugs and moreat BoukiandLapin.com |
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Brazil $9.99 Brazil is the first work of fiction to depict five centuries of a great nation’s remarkable history, its evolution from colony to kingdom, from empire to modern republic. With a stunning cast of real and fictional characters, the story unfolds in South America, Africa and Europe.Two families dominate this extraordinary novel. The Cavalcantis are among the original settlers and establish the classic Brazilian plantation—vast, powerful, built with slave labor. The da Silvas represent the second element in both contemporary and historical Brazil: pathfinders and prospectors. For generations, these adventurers have their eyes set on El Dorado, which they ultimately find—in a coffee fazenda at São Paulo. Brazil is an intensely human story—brutal and violent, tender and passionate. Perilous explorations through the Brazilian wilderness…the perpetual clash of pioneer and native, visionary and fortune hunter, master and slave, zealot and exploiter… the thunder of war on land and sea as European powers and South American nations pursue their territorial conquests…the triumphs and tragedies of a people who built a nation covering half the South American continent …all are here in one spell-binding saga. |
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Breeding Plantation Tree Crops: Tropical Species $249 Tree species, spread across a wide range of genera, are indispensible to human life. Their breeding, poised to satisfy human needs, presents significant challenges. Tree crops face a variety of agronomic and horticultural problems in propagation, yield, appearance, quality, diseases and pest control, abiotic stresses and poor shelf-life. Additionally, shrinkage of cultivable land and the pressure of growing demand have resulted in growth of tree crops under marginal conditions that call for concerted efforts for their genetic improvement. Increased attention to the environment, sustainability and diet in recent years in turn magnifies the importance of study of these crops. With the use of modern molecular and biotechnological tools, the task of improving yield in tree crops is foremost in the acumen of future global agricultural research for sustainable production.This 2-volume book series deals with both tropical and temperate tree crop species, and represents an effort toward compilation of all available worldwide research on these subjects. This volume covers fruits and nuts (banana, mango, guava, papaya, grape, date palm, litchi, avocado, and cashew), oil crops (coconut, oil palm and olive), industrial crops (rubber) and beverages (coffee, tea and cocoa). The contributing authors are internationally-known specialists who provide first hand comprehensive knowledge. All contributory book chapters have been peer reviewed and revised accordingly. This book series is an indispensable reference for scientists, researchers, teachers, students, policy makers and planters.S. Mohan Jain, Plant Biotechnologist, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, FinlandP. M. Priyadarshan, Plant Breeder, Rubber Research Institute of India. |
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Breeding Plantation Tree Crops: Tropical Species $249 Tree species, spread across a wide range of genera, are indispensible to human life. Their breeding, poised to satisfy human needs, presents significant challenges. Tree crops face a variety of agronomic and horticultural problems in propagation, yield, appearance, quality, diseases and pest control, abiotic stresses and poor shelf-life. Additionally, shrinkage of cultivable land and the pressure of growing demand have resulted in growth of tree crops under marginal conditions that call for concerted efforts for their genetic improvement. Increased attention to the environment, sustainability and diet in recent years in turn magnifies the importance of study of these crops. With the use of modern molecular and biotechnological tools, the task of improving yield in tree crops is foremost in the acumen of future global agricultural research for sustainable production.This 2-volume book series deals with both tropical and temperate tree crop species, and represents an effort toward compilation of all available worldwide research on these subjects. This volume covers fruits and nuts (banana, mango, guava, papaya, grape, date palm, litchi, avocado, and cashew), oil crops (coconut, oil palm and olive), industrial crops (rubber) and beverages (coffee, tea and cocoa). The contributing authors are internationally-known specialists who provide first hand comprehensive knowledge. All contributory book chapters have been peer reviewed and revised accordingly. This book series is an indispensable reference for scientists, researchers, teachers, students, policy makers and planters.S. Mohan Jain, Plant Biotechnologist, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, FinlandP. M. Priyadarshan, Plant Breeder, Rubber Research Institute of India. |
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Bridgeport Futon Frame – Finish: Walnut $256 Futon Cover Not Included – EL1450: Features: -Easily Converts from Sofa to Sleeper.-Two Position Front Operational Hinge Mechanism.-Discounted Mattress and matching Golden Oak or Walnut Coffee and End Tables available when purchased with this futon.-Also available: Polyurethane Non-Slip Magic Gripper to keep mattresses in place.-Made in the USA.-Note: This product will not ship to Puerto Rico.-Click Here to See the Full Line of Futon Covers Available for This Futon!.-13 gauge heavy duty innerspring center.-Natural Fabric.-13 gauge heavy duty innerspring center.-Center is surrounded by 20 lbs. of Enviro cotton, 1.5 thick density convoluted foam, 1 thick poly fiber board, and edurolater pad. Includes: -Includes 4 lbs. of 2” Visco Elastic Memory Foam, 2 polyester wrap, 1.5 thick density convoluted foam, 1 poly fiber board, and edurolater pad. Options: -Four mattress options available.-Available in Black or Natural Fabric. Construction: -Constructed of Plantation Hardwood and Metal. Color/Finish: -Walnut, Es[ressp and Golden Oak Finish. Dimensions: -Sofa: 83 1/4” L x 36” D x 31 1/4” H.-Sleeper: 83 1/4” L x 54” D x 23 1/4” H. Warranty: -1 year limited warranty. |
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Bundle-65 Night & Day Standard Corona Coffee Table Set in Rosewood (3 Pieces) $600.82 ND2252 ***INCLUDED IN THIS SET: (1)Corona Coffee Table in Rosewood (2)Corona End Table in Rosewood Includes: Set includes coffee table and end table Construction: Constructed of solid plantation grown rubberwood (no rainforest lumber used) Color/Finish: Rosewood finish Dimensions: Coffee Table Overall Dimensions: 16.88” H x 23.63” W x 47.63” D End Table Overall Dimensions: 19” H x 23.63” W x 23.63” D Warranty: 10 year limited warranty |
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Kona Hawaii Gold Gourmet Blend Kona Coffee. 1 Lb (454g) Parry Estate Plantation $13.99 |
You can see more about Plantation Coffee below, or return to our home page, Coffee Inside
More Plantation Coffee Info
Coffee Kings
From the time when Missionaries first introduced coffee trees to Hawaii in 1827, espresso has flourished and became a serious mainstay product in the Islands.
Sugar is good but Coffee is King on the Islands.
Hawaiians grin more than most. Why? May it be they’ve a secret? May or not it’s the island espresso? Probably, the key is the wonderful coffee on the islands.
Actually, most are well on to Hawaiian espresso’s mystique. It’s hard to dwell with out espresso grown in Hawaii when you’re hooked on it. Some by no means go away the islands and not using a bag or two tucked of their luggage. The aroma, when it escapes from the bag, is as much the scent of the islands because the salty smell of the ocean or the sweet perfume of ginger. Espresso is a good take-dwelling choice. It stuffs simply into over-stuffed bags, doesn’t break or spill, and will cross the obligatory agriculture examine at Hawaii airports.
A relative of the gardenia, espresso has aromatic white blossoms in the spring. In the summertime, the timber have inexperienced berries, which flip purple as they ripen. The berries don’t all ripen at once, so that they should be picked by hand a number of occasions a season. The harvesting season begins in August.
Coffee Farmers at the lowest elevations could end harvesting by December, whereas these on the 2000-foot level would possibly harvest into March. Farmers have to roast and taste their coffee by means of out the crop, to taste the totally different grades, separate the pale from the common inexperienced from the opal green.
During the coffee seasons, buyers hang around indicators announcing how a lot they’ll pay for ‘cherries,’ the identify given to the crimson coffee berries. In a good year, they may provide as a lot as a dollar a pound.
The Island’s situations are excellent for growing coffee. Many farms have succeeded, especially in Kona, the place 600 small, impartial farms flourish on volcanic slopes in a local weather of sun-drenched mornings and misty afternoons. Gourmand coffee grows in different components of Hawaii as properly, with 3,400 acres in cultivation, Kauai Espresso Co. is one of Hawaii’s largest coffee plantations.
A Trip in Every Cup
Lengthy for a jolt of java?
Irrespective of the place you might be you can take pleasure in Hawaiian coffee. Many firms corresponding to www.CoffeeSpecialties.com ship Hawaiian coffee all around the world. They work with the best growers and roasters on the islands and provide a superb collection of premium Hawaiian coffee shipped contemporary to your door.
Prepare a tour of Coffees of Hawaii. Strolling tours are supplied here; you’ll be led across the 500-acre coffee plantation to witness the roasting course of “from seed to cup.” The tour wraps up in the tasting room, where an espresso bar churns out samples. Reservations required. Closed weekends.- a hundred and sixty Farrington Freeway, Kualapuu; 800-346-5051, fax 808-567-9270;
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