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Julian Pinilla - Castillo Washed
Valle del Cauca, Colombia

From Julian Pinilla’s Andean Bear-Friendly Farm, we bring to you two lots of our Castillo Wash, an extraordinary Colombian Coffee that protects the vulnerable Andean bear and preserves a lush, wild ecosystem. Panela, citrus, lemongrass and cacao - a very bright juicy cup with a creamy body. 
Julian is the leader of the Andean Bear-Friendly Coffee project in Valle del Cauca, the world’s first Andean Bear -certified coffee. With the support of local and international organisations – including WCS, which now leads the initiative – a small group of farmers and conservationists came together to transform traditional coffee cultivation practices, aiming to protect the vulnerable Andean Bear. By leaving natural corridors untouched and cultivating within diverse forest landscapes, they are creating safe passageways that reconnect fragmented habitats, allowing bears and other wildlife to migrate, feed, and thrive. Camera traps on these farms capture glimpses of pumas, bears, and countless other creatures moving through the land, proof of an agricultural landscape alive with biodiversity. 

Health benefits

Coffee beans are full of healthy polyphenols

Harvest

August 2025

Packaging

35 kg Grain Pro sacks

Cupping notes

Fragrance: sweet, fruity, cacao. Flavour: citrus fruits, dark chocolate, red fruits, sweet. Residual Flavour: prolonged. Lemongrass and panela. Acidity: bright. Body: creamy.

Origin

El Aguila, Valle del Cauca

Cooperative

A group of 8 farmers belonging to the Oso Andino project

Altitude

1800-2100m

Process

Wash

Q grade

84.25 - 84.75

Variety

Castillo

Kindred Forest

Supports Andean Bear Friendly Coffee Project, Valle del Cauca, Colombia

The project

With the support of WCS Colombia and other conservation organisations, a small group of farmers in Valle del Cauca and conservationists came together to transform traditional coffee cultivation. Since its inception, the Wildlife Friendly Project has restored 470 hectares of natural forest. Farmers are now seeing the return of the Andean bear and other wildlife, confirmed by camera-trap footage.  

The people

Led by Julian Pinilla, the group of eight farmers live in the municipality of El Águila in the beautiful misty mountains. At altitudes above 1800 masl the coffee has vibrant acidity and citrusy flavour notes. Working with the conservationists, the farmers not only succeeded at expanding the forest cover in the wildlife corridor and transition to regenerative and organic practices but also raise coffee production and improve the quality, achieving the Q scores above 85. By preserving parts of their farms as forest and practicing agroforestry without the use of chemicals, farmers nurture both the soil and local biodiversity.

Harvest and process

Tradtional wash process with 2 days of fermentation, followed by washing and drying on raised beds.

Project page

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