COFFEE FLOWERS IN BLOOM

COFFEE FLOWERS IN BLOOM

Coffee lovers will recognize the dark red cherries dangling from coffee plants during harvest season, but in order for the fruit to grow every year, they have to flower first. This year’s coffee plants have already bloomed, so we visited Costa Rica’s best coffee regions in order to share the beauty of the fields in bloom.

coffee Flowers

HOW DO COFFEE PLANTS FLOWER?

In Costa Rica, coffee plants begin to produce beautiful, white flowers between April and May. For them to grow, the region needs to receive a heavy rainfall. Buds will then begin to blossom about two weeks after the season’s first downpour.

Coffee Flowes

Once the flowers start blooming, workers leave the fields. Because blooming is a delicate process and absolutely essential to the health of the plant, no one enters the fields in order to protect the plants.

Each blooming flower is a symbol of the coffee bean that will come months later. Ideally, arabica coffee plants will receive around 1,600-1,800 millimeters of rain in a season. With optimum rainfall, each coffee tree can have up to 40,000 flowers.

Coffee flowers

About a month after the flowers appear, the aroma of the flowers is at its strongest and the petals begin to fall to the ground. Left behind after the flowers fall is the carpel, which will eventually mature into a coffee cherry. The self-pollinating plants nurture this cherry until it is a ripe coffee bean ready to be roasted for your morning cup of coffee, and then the flowering process begins all over again.

Coffee Flowers