What goes in as ripe cherries comes out as beans, which can go on to be sold as some of the most delicious—and expensive—coffee in the world
In Brazil, the proverbial goose that lays the golden egg is in reality something closer to a pheasant that excretes coffee beans.
At the Camocim coffee farm, deep in the bucolic hills of Espirito Santo state in Brazil's southeast, jacus—a type of pheasant native to tropical forests there—are considered some of the most astute pickers (or rather, eaters) of coffee cherries.
"He chooses the best fruits, the ripest," said worker Agnael Costa, 23, delicately scooping up droppings left behind by one of the birds between two tree trunks.
What goes in as ripe cherries comes out as beans, which can go on to be sold as some of the most delicious—and expensive—coffee in the world.
The coffee at Camocim grows in the middle of the lush forest, and the jacus here are wild, eating (and defecating) at their own pace.