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Teeccino's Rainforest Projects

Rainforest Vanilla From Mexico
Vanilla, the only member of the orchid family used as a food, is native to Southern Mexico where the Spanish conquistadors discovered the Aztec emperor, Montezuma, drinking "Cacahuatl", a beverage made from cacoa, honey and vanilla which inspired the development of chocolate. The flavor of Mexican vanilla is reputed to be the best in the world but since very little has been available for export, Bourbon vanilla from Madagascar is now more commonly used. In modern Mexico, vanilla reproduction by independent growers dropped when large plantation style cultivation was introduced by American cola and spice companies. Indigenous growers were discouraged from growing vanilla because the buying and curing of the green vanilla beans (a process that takes six months) has been controlled by a Mafia-like group that dominates the small growers.

Vanilla cultivation is a cash crop compatible with the rainforest which can be grown in primary forest or in second growth forest which is now regenerating. The villages involved in vanilla cultivation include Chinantescos Indians from Oaxaca, Zoque-Popoluca and Nahaut Indians from Southern Veracruz and Totonacos Indians and Mestizos from Papantla, Veracruz. In Papantla, a cooperative was formed and money was raised to build a facility where vanilla could be cured. This facility has been used to educate representatives from other communities that want to build their own curing facilities.

Organic methods of agriculture are being employed with the vanilla cultivation. Vanilla vines are supported by nitrogen fixing shade trees of the legume family. Thick mulch is put on the vanilla roots to protect them and the soil from dehydration. Because of the importance of shade trees to reconnect the forest canopy in deforested areas, vanilla is an important crop for agro-forestry plans.

Caroline has worked with vanilla cooperatives to assist them in successfully developing export sales for their vanilla to extract manufacturers in the USA. This is the first time in many decades that the indigenous people have been empowered to control the price and destiny of their own vanilla harvest.

The benefits of vanilla cultivation in Mexico include:
  • Vanilla cultivation helps preserve the rainforest and its biodiversity by allowing second growth forest to regenerate. The shade trees growing over vanilla serve to reconnect the forest canopy. Primary forest can also become economically productive as vanilla vines are planted on existing trees.

  • Vanilla provides a much needed cash crop to native people living in subsistence economic conditions at the edge of the rainforest. Further deforestation is prevented as alternative sources for income crops is provided.

  • Vanilla cultivation is an agent for beneficial social change because it provides cooperative opportunities for individuals and for different communities to work together towards a common goal. It also offers valuable work for women and children who are otherwise limited in their ability to earn money.





Rainforest Honey From Mexico
The Calakmul Biosphere Reserve on the Yucatan Peninsula is rated the fourth most biodiverse area in the world. It is home to more than 10 species of mammals in danger of extinction including the jaguar, tapir, white-tailed and brocket deer, the harpy eagle, ocellated turkey and great currassow. Five out of six species of Mexican cats live in the reserve along with howler and spider monkeys, anteaters, and white-lipped peccaries. The reserve is an important wintering site for over 60 species of migratory birds from the United States and Canada. It is also home to Mayan Indians who still live in traditional villages in areas surrounding the Reserve.

The Mayans are working with ecologists and agronomists to develop livelihoods from forest products which are compatible with rainforest preservations efforts. Beekeeping which is non-invasive to the forest and takes advantage of the great variety of wild flowering trees is one of the primary ways to give economic value to the forest. Tall canopy trees, subjected to illegal lumbering, become protected as sources for nectar for the honey bees.

Teeccino works with a cooperative of Mayan beekeepers to develop sales for their honey to North American manufacturers. Purchase of this honey directly supports the families of the Mayan beekeepers, allowing them to export their honey through their own cooperative without any loss of profits to an intermediary. Formerly, the Mayans were victims of whatever price was being offered by the "Coyotes" or local buyers who come to the villages on behalf of Mexican exporters. The Mayan Coop with the administrative help of a local NGO (non-governmental organization) was organized to give the beekeepers their first opportunity to become their own exporters and to benefit from the world market price of their honey.

If you would like more information on Mexican Vanilla or Mexican Honey, please call Teeccino at (800) 498-3434.
 

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