HOW TO GROW COFFEE FROM COFFEE PLANT SEEDS
Ideally to grow coffee bean plants, you should start with a
freshly picked coffee cherry, but most of us don’t live in a coffee producing
country, so this is a bit problematic. If, however, you do happen to reside in
a coffee producing country, pick ripe coffee cherries by hand, pulp them, wash,
and ferment in a container until the pulp flops off. After this, rewash,
discarding any beans that float. Then dry the beans on a mesh screen in open,
dry air but not direct sun. The beans should be slightly soft and moist inside
and dry on the outside; bite into it to find out.
Since most of us don’t
live in a coffee-producing region, green coffee can be bought from a green
coffee supplier. Make sure it is from a fresh, recent crop. Although the bean
can be germinated for almost four months, surer results are had if fresh. You
will probably want to plant many seeds to get one plant; they’re kind of
finicky. Fresh seeds germinate in 2 ½ months while older seeds take about 6 months.
How to
Sprout Coffee Seeds
Once you have your
seeds, soak them in water for 24 hours, drain, and then sow in damp sand or wet
vermiculite, or put the seed between moist coffee sacks.
After you germinate
coffee tree seeds, remove them from the medium. Place the seed flat side down
in a hole made into loam soil with a high humus content to which rotted manure,
bone meal or dried blood can be added. You can also try a lightweight, porous
soil. Don’t press the soil down. Place ½ inch of mulched grass atop to conserve
moisture but remove it when the seed has germinated. Water seeds daily but not
too much, just moist.
Once your seeds have
germinated, the plant can either be left or transplanted in a porous, low pH
soil with a high nitrogen content. Orchid fertilizer may be used sparingly on
the coffee plant to maintain the low pH and add minerals.
Place the plant
indoors under artificial lighting. Water once a week and allow to drain and
again during the week with fertilizer. Keep the soil moist and well drained.
Patience is now a definite virtue. It takes two to three
years for the tree to flower and possible cherries to be produced. To encourage
flowering, reduce watering at the start of winter for the successive two to
three months. Once spring begins, water the plant well to shock it into bloom.
Oh, and then you still aren’t done. Once the cherries mature, you can harvest,
pulp, ferment, dry roast and then ah, finally enjoy a nice cup of drip.
It takes some
painstaking effort to mimic tropical high altitude conditions where coffee bean
trees thrive, but well worth the effort even if you don’t get the finest
quality java out of your tree.
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