It is either Lynn has finally evolved into being a creator with supernatural abilities, or this Gitau guy is a genius, or maybe both. For the first time, we as Kenyans are confronted by a true story of success that's not about theft, corruption or wheeler-dealing. Almost surreal! This video captures how Kenya would have looked like if we didn't follow or involve greedy politicians and their cartels in the leadership of our beloved nation. Somehow, it feels surreal ,strange and even frightening to watch this video. Ni kama mtu anaota. Almost too good to be true. Is this really a Kenyan documentary or a good script? Well done Lynn, well done Mr Gitau. You've just answered all the questions that we would have wanted to ask, not only about coffee but also about our national ideology.
@LynnNgugi9 ай бұрын
Thank you🙏🙏🙏 Growth is inevitable
@ngurekim62789 ай бұрын
@@LynnNgugi Keep going. You are now beginning to speak to the soul of the nation. I see in you a new "Media Mission." This is going to reconfigure the outlook of our media landscape.... that's if they don't finally hunt & force you into joining the local "operation mockingbird" space. Praying for you.
@gitgenKE9 ай бұрын
The do it yourself system of things.
@kenyawomenschamber9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Lynn for this very inspiring story. ❤❤❤
@kawalanachalwe9 ай бұрын
54:16 54:17 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@mercyk26729 ай бұрын
Thats why it's so important to involve your wife in your business dealings. My dad died suddenly in the early 90's and left many unfinished projects and loans. He was a wise man and had involved mom in everything, she completed all the projects, paid the loans and started getting good returns. She involved us through the entire process, so when we lost her in 2011, we knew how to run the business and its thriving. We're now teaching our young children how to handle affairs in order to continue the family legacy of real estate. Not involving your wife is a disservice not only to her, but future generations.
@gitgenKE9 ай бұрын
Awesome, what type of business? That's why most people should read more - The prophet by Kahlil Gibran
@mercyk26729 ай бұрын
@@gitgenKE real estate development
@ichooseviolence25329 ай бұрын
Not today's wives plz.. The wife of your dad was from a different timeline than today's women
@mercyk26729 ай бұрын
@@ichooseviolence2532 this man's wife is of today's era or a millennial but he involved her. The problem is men are marrying for the wrong reasons, they look for beauty above character. That's why they're ending up with all kinds of problems.
@ann78619 ай бұрын
Am so proud of a fellow farmer,yes value addition is the way to go in Kenya and Agriculture will have greater value.Good Job Gitau & Family 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. Thank you Lynn.
@nagidamerav89739 ай бұрын
This gentleman is such a vibe!! A very balanced child of God
@glslatifahnsubuga519 ай бұрын
Apart from coffee farming but i have loved the togetherness and hardwork in the family it's so amazing
@ichooseviolence25329 ай бұрын
Me too.. where I come from, my family members just black tax all the time. I had to ghost most of them. I always wonder why can't they just decide to improve themselves coz I'm the only one who seems to be thirsty for improvement
@derivsynthetic9 ай бұрын
I saw a video of a guy in tiktok who graduated with BSC AGRIC then he's back in school for diploma in clinical medicine 😂 Do you all know how powerful AGRICULTURE is?
@wambuijage76939 ай бұрын
Is it me or is this just Lynn Ngugis elder brother???? They really rhyme! Passion is the only way to go and keeping God first........waow,so many lessons learnt from this one. A real king who is not intimidated by his queen!!!!!
@wywy48039 ай бұрын
Lynnnnnnn finallyyyyyyy!!!!!!! I grew up in a coffee farm, moved to canada , i miss farming, been planning to come back and farm but everyone is nyeff nyeffuing me about it. I needed this greenlight
@PurityKarafa89 ай бұрын
I don't know how someone can go a whole day without watching Lynn, I'm addicted to this channel and ain't regretting a thing coz everyday I learn alot here... Thanks Lynn for being an inspiration to our generation ❤️❤️., ILOVE YOU QUEEN LYNN❤️📌💯🫂
@LynnNgugi9 ай бұрын
Thank you. We appreciate the support 🙏🙏
@mamakokianddede6079 ай бұрын
We demand 3 videos a day.
@CaLaLa9 ай бұрын
For me it's my Saturday/Sunday companion while doing chapos.
@orbajepchirchir491Ай бұрын
Iam a small scale farmer...I have 200 trees of coffee and I trust in God through the knowledge I have got from this show I will extend to generations I will raise.
@junisacollection65939 ай бұрын
The fear of God in this man!His respect for his wife and family generally.His level of knowledge in terms of management and coffee in general.Good job Lynn.Good one.
@A.C._Taylor8 күн бұрын
As an end consumer of green beans here in Canada, I am currently paying 3779.79 Kenyan Shillings per kilogram, for Kenya Nyeri Othaya Ichamama AA Washed. As a farmer myself, I understand the frustration as the margins continue to decrease every year. It is getting to the point where you need multiple sections (640 acres or 259 hectares / section) of land to turn a narrow profit. I stopped this video early in order to comment. I hope there is a solution to your problem presented. EDIT: The one problem with producing roasted coffee, especially single origin and other specialty coffees, is that the consumer may be willing to pay what is seen as an exponentially larger sum of money, which they do. But they also demand that it be freshly roasted. That is why I roast my own beans because if I were to pay for the Same Kenya Nyeri but roasted, it would at minimum, double the price and I could not afford that much for those beans, as delicious as they are. I also roast my own because I can buy larger quantities and have a steady supply of the freshest roasted beans as possible. Perhaps developing a model where both upgraded products (roasted beans) and raw ingredients (green beans) could not only be distributed by the cooperative, but also allow for farm direct sales. If I could buy a minimum of 2 kilograms of green beans directly from the cooperative and only have to wait a maximum of 3 weeks for them to arrive, I would do just that. Think about that, a coffee farmer could easily make 3000 shillings/kg for green beans. If you try to enact a tariff on the established distribution chain, the chain will opt out in distributing your products. So it would be better to become your own distributors. Make the world come to your doorstep. After listening and watching this video. I've come to realize that the problems and issues facing farmers are very similar, the world over. Producers (farmers) should always get the lion's share of the profits associated with the commodity they are producing. It's easy to consume but it is very hard to produce.
@teeerubo9 ай бұрын
This is opening my mind...my family cleared the coffee plantation and replaced it with tea, But still the tea doesn't pay well... This interview is a game changer for me and my siblings, Thanks so much
@Bushboydonkey9 ай бұрын
Watching this when I am in contact with someone to uproot my half an acre tea.. I don't need it at all very useless thing.. afadhali niweke rabbit
@LynnNgugi9 ай бұрын
Good morning team LNN, What are your thoughts on today's conversation and what other Agribusiness conversations do you think we should have? Instagram handle: Karungurucoffeeltd Their website is karungurucoffee.com Join our Telegram community here for exclusive Behind The Scenes t.me/official_lynnngugi To Support our work; Mpesa +254 726 916 908 To contact our incredible partners; Kings Developers: +254 700 090 060 or sales@kingsdevelopers.com and their website at www.kingsdevelopers.com Maridady Motors: +254 709 888 178 or +254 709 888 176 and their website at www.maridadymotors.com You can always share your story via info@Lnn.digital Thank you for watching
@carolineawunya32069 ай бұрын
Plz pick up my call
@GacheriUK27 күн бұрын
Lynn, imagine I never came across this video in May. But hasn't it been worthwhile - sorting out my dad's coffee bushes and needed this knowledge! Umetusaidia sana! Please keep doing Agribusiness shows. Could you also do one on tea farming?
@MnMOtraderslaunch9 ай бұрын
My dad has 10 thousand trees of coffee last month he wanted to uproot all the trees because of disappointments in the sector. I am coming back home to invest in the farm the future is bright with coffee.
@T849485 ай бұрын
Do you need a partner or worker? Im a African living in Sweden who is planning to go back ..
@FREDWARUI-pc9dh4 ай бұрын
I have a plantation of coffee in nyeri@@T84948
@GacheriUK27 күн бұрын
Tell him not to uproot. Just get the knowledge of good farming/husbandry of coffee and getting the bushes to produce good coffee berries. With such a number of trees you can set up a small "factory" where you can wash the berries and get the white product (the one fetching 5 - 6 dollars). Then after you get the hang of it, you can venture into roasting!
@mercyk26729 ай бұрын
I remember how back in the 80's my dad cut down all our coffee trees out of frustration. That land is now fully developed, we're making more out of real estate in a month than my dad ever made on selling coffee for 5 years. Only to come to America and find a cup of premium coffee at Starbucks going for $25.00. It's really demoralizing 😢.
@GacheriUK27 күн бұрын
Imagine those who uprooted the trees or their younger generations are now the ones re-planting coffee. Guys who were "green" in the industry have now become self taught by listening to such videos & more learning!! Farmers who have started learning the new technologies are now re-planting & re-investing in coffee. I know a couple of farmers huko shagz kwetu!!
@rang36889 ай бұрын
This presentation is excellent, and Mr. Gitau appears to be a very humble and God-fearing man. He deserves a role, even as an advisor, in the Ministry of Agriculture. The financial opportunities in this sector are significant. In Kenya, it can indeed be said that money grows on trees, indicating the profitability of farming. The money here, to 100 tons, came to almost Kshs 300 million 😂 (current dollar rate).
@r..a86809 ай бұрын
Coffee, cocoa(in West Africa) and Vanilla (in Madagascar). Billions of dollars industries if managed well.
@LadyS-029 ай бұрын
I think generational wealth is successful only when managed well with clean heart hakuna chuki wala wivu this man is a genius coz coffee farmers are paid peanuts. I see arabs value coffee no matter how expensive it is bora it is good quality 👌 LYNN YOUR INTERVIEWS ARE TOP NOTCH 👌
@terrymwenda9 ай бұрын
Wow.. I like such talks...and the guy has all the knowledge about coffee... Value addition is the way to go.
@marianhinda18119 ай бұрын
Wow this show today has inspired me alot,amazing explanations about coffee and farming and great ideas,watching from Namibia 🇳🇦👌❤
@florahsoila9 ай бұрын
Success comes from the wisdom that is gotten ONLY God.
@josphinemacharia30949 ай бұрын
Woooh this is educative yesterday was discussing with my Mum coz i bought a land with coffe and was telling them i don't want coffe and she should find someone to remove that coffee and she was like noo and i told her if you like u can keep coffee side don't want it reason i live in Germany and yesterday i passed in a town where they roast coffee and sell and trust me it's soo expensive. Watching this today am like they don't have coffee but they are making money.. i think we need more of these shows that will enlighten us embrace farming and get good people who can market for us and let farmers enjoy their hard work. Good show Lynn ❤.
@rosierosita.72359 ай бұрын
They say that they are best Coffee producer yet they don't even have a clue how much hardwork goes in there 😢
@josphinemacharia30949 ай бұрын
@@rosierosita.7235true it's very sad but now we have hope🙏
@gitgenKE9 ай бұрын
A good family friend of mine is selling a 1.5 acre tea farm in gitiha if interested.
@shabbo129 ай бұрын
Government should include such farmers who are doing already to help yhem with policy making to improve agriculture cause they understand it from preproduction to final product
@scarletsimpson48079 ай бұрын
cartelsss
@josephkariba86769 ай бұрын
Government Government government....continue waiting for the government.
@shabbo129 ай бұрын
@@josephkariba8676 what's your solutions
@irina-maria28679 ай бұрын
Thank you, Lynn, for sharing another beautiful, successful story of Africa. My time spent watching you is not wasted. It's very beneficial! I am originally from West Africa, and you are one of my top Kenyan KZbinrs.
@justusmochoge65779 ай бұрын
This shows that education is the key in most things including farming. Listen to how he explains the statistics and you have no choice but to digest the facts. Good bless you Lynn for sharing this
@judwmbiyu9 ай бұрын
This man has a very beautiful story ,it teaches us how to focus on ourselves and our inner ability. Lyn you doing a great job 👏👏
@chikaabtwn22449 ай бұрын
This is the best interview ever ! Real issues for real people.
@kennethmaiyo61069 ай бұрын
When I saw coffee I know I was going to learn alot I grow coffee myself and this is the reason I need to learn more about coffee thank you Lynn for this episode
@mokangy9 ай бұрын
Wow residential property within a coffee farm is the dream!!!!
@acholadaniel9 ай бұрын
Hiyo ndio conversation ina bamba sasa..
@justusmochoge65779 ай бұрын
This guy is a genius so sweet to listen to
@kaban-ji2 ай бұрын
I am from DRC and have evolved many many years in the diaspora. Your documentaries are an INSPIRATION!! THANK YOU!!!
@ruthnjoki28189 ай бұрын
What a smart young man, with a wise wife. Very motivated by this interview. Lynn, keep up the good work.❤
@sarah_nya9 ай бұрын
This was a beautiful episode to watch. I recently discovered good tea in Embu,that you cannot find in the supermarkets since it's what is usually exported and they package for the local community. Kenya has the best tea and coffee in the world. I'll definitely be shopping for Karunguru coffee. Good job Lynn for doing Gitau's story. This is the true meaning of 'one story at a time'
@JosephTumusiime456 ай бұрын
1:39:02 Thanks for the programs
@WanjiruMuya9 ай бұрын
Lynn this episode is very personal 😃i grew up in a coffee farm but i hated the fact that despite all the efforts, manure, kulimia, kutoa thakathi🤣, picking and going to the factory, they would pay 1kilo for 2bob. We couldn't even afford kulipa fees😂My Dad still has his coffee trees and the yields are better unlike the old days. Best Cappuccino i took first was from our coffee, Dad would dry the beans, "Mbûni" and mum would fry them then gride the with ihiga ria thîo🙂 Ukitembea Tetu you will have a taste😍 Thank you for this Episode.
@LynnNgugi9 ай бұрын
Dear Wanjuru, always beautiful to see you here🙏🙏The exploitation was real:)
@coachdaisyndege9 ай бұрын
Are you my sibling 😂 story of my life.From Tetu too, one eve of Christmas,we took our coffee cherries to make it back home in time in full anticipation for Christmas day.Chapo, kuku,mbuzi and tree top juice .Wueh😅,shock ! The ,queue was crazy we spent the night in the factory 😢 finally had our coffee weighed early morning and I later learnt they priced it at 2/- a kg😢years later my dad uprooted and planted a banana plantation 😊.Years later,I got married to a farming enthusiast, who has coffee bushes and the prices changed,and I love coffee now.😅
@WanjiruMuya9 ай бұрын
@@coachdaisyndege Am happy to meet a Cousin from the internet😍that coffee picking was torturous 😂then kupanga line usiku. Those experiences made us🙂
@WanjiruMuya9 ай бұрын
@@LynnNgugi ❤️❤️ Very🥲
@kandisphere88289 ай бұрын
I would love to taste that coffee that has been dried and grinded in the traditional ways. My mum also grew in a coffee growing region, and that is what their parents relied on for school fees, and it was not paying well. They have since cut down all the coffee bushes.
@Joyful-gu5bj9 ай бұрын
Lynn,just finished watching n listening. Have learned so much about coffee that I neve knew at all. The process is not easy but done with passion the end is so fulfilling. Wow! AM SO PROUD OF THE ENTIRE FAMILY. INTERNATIONAL BRAND. Congratulations and may the Lord continue to expand your borders in Jesus mighty name Amen.
@kennethokumu63759 ай бұрын
Great conversation, this guy is talking allot of sense. Kenyan coffee is excellent... Knowledge is the key, empowerment of farmers through learning.
@gitgenKE9 ай бұрын
Insightful conversation. The host was exemplary.
@dnarna89949 ай бұрын
Excellent, inspiring and informative interview! Probably LNN's best and most impactful show so far, imo.
@ngomaninc8 ай бұрын
This is beyond refreshing. Deep, educational and will certainly be very impactful to many. I love Gitaus convictions in his pursuit. Buying Karunguru brand today.
@mimowaiyaki26559 ай бұрын
Wonderful interview. Very pleasantly knowledgeable young farmer. I like his passion for farming and mega respect for his family and particularly his grandparents. ☕️. ❤
@Emmanuel967-c2m9 ай бұрын
Very brilliant mind. Thank you Lynn for bringing Gitau.
@the254system9 ай бұрын
That's great wisdom right there. You are a wonderful man. May you live long
@Simba_Ke8 ай бұрын
Thank you Gitau for your invaluable insights. All the best to you and your family as you evolve into your next phase. Lynn and team, you're awesome for finding us such African gems! Keep up the good work everybody!
@hodanmohamed36634 ай бұрын
Through this show I got to know how powerful common man and woman is thnx guys
@michaelalando9 ай бұрын
Great episode. This will inspire many who might have given up. The outlook for coffee has been increasingly disappointing over the years yet Kenya was a major global exporter of highly valued coffee up to the 80s.
@brikerubo.92179 ай бұрын
It has been an awesome interview and very educative. I have grown up knowing coffee is valueless and does not pay reason being I could see my parents working hard on coffee plants and during mshahara time the farmers are told the coffee sank in the Indian ocean hence it wasn't told thus no payment for that season. I was always heart broken but thanks Lynn for your hardwork of ensuring we have the right information from the right people, kudos girl and your team. I have learnt alot, no shame in hardwork and there is nothing that God created is valueless, God work is always good and beautiful if work is put in it.
@marythuo33599 ай бұрын
Famers can form groups and come up with such ideas. Hope you can assist some to get market and even train them.
@Puritychomba-q2p4 ай бұрын
Omg I thought I knew about coffee, I have learnt sooo much thanks my brother and Lynn ooh my ! Thanks for airing this am so fired up will have to visit Karunguru farm . Wueeh!!!! Thanks Gitau
@nelsonamatsili60079 ай бұрын
The best advice hardship builds character It's the difference that makes a person consistent
@glslatifahnsubuga519 ай бұрын
Behind every successful man there is a strong woman credit to your wife
@culturedtutor56019 ай бұрын
Behind every successful man, there is a political family.
@ichooseviolence25329 ай бұрын
Behind every successful man is the train of girls he refused to send 2k urgently
@T849485 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this! I was born in Kenya but Im raised in Sweden and Im now planning to go back to start a coffee or Avocado farm.
@unclemikethebaker9 ай бұрын
I have really enjoyed this conversation. Now I have a new supplier for my coffee shop. Thank you Lynn
@djvoicy16539 ай бұрын
Great insight and safe guard especially for our central region we are being bought out by the outside forces but we can't go huku to buying
@okakamaureen31629 ай бұрын
Coffee is very good with stomach upsets. Hot black coffee works miracles.. it cleans the stomach very very well. Taking coffee every morning lights my day. I love you guys... Good job. I appreciate you LYNN.. YOU ARE THE BEST.
@Emmanuel967-c2m9 ай бұрын
Entrepreneurship skills are the best.
@kmaggie09 ай бұрын
Togetherness is everything. My future . We need our kids involved in what we are doing
@marywangeci6265 ай бұрын
Lynn thank so much for the wise selection of your programmes there's quite alo to learn and l always feel quite encouraged.
@Terra-Loop9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the blueprint
@prof.ericokongo17509 ай бұрын
The discussion was quite insightful. Thanks Lynn
@abitu479 ай бұрын
Coffee is a detox as well. Days when i used to drink a thermos of coffee a day i was very lean.
@danielwainaina65699 ай бұрын
Agribusiness is mind-blowing idea i look forward to reach there
@jeddymoon38039 ай бұрын
Hey lovely, Thanks for bringing a variety of topics .
@samuelnguru63119 ай бұрын
Coffee is Gold that's what my dad taught me
@njuhinyararaofficial9 ай бұрын
I love coffee,I had to prepare a cup i drink as I watch this. Am curious,which is their best packet that sells more?That's what I would like to start with.
@cecilianaisiae5869 ай бұрын
Encouraging...there is hope for the coffee farmer. I visited Cordoba Coffee Museum in Mexico. The value add included earings and necklaces made from dried coffee beans😊
@jennieaw40749 ай бұрын
Lynn and Gitau, what a lovely story, keep it up.
@frankojwang59889 ай бұрын
Education - we need to focus on Agribusiness and value addition should be the focus.
@joycegondwe95609 ай бұрын
0ooooo uncles are very responsible people. God bless them
@maryannndungu15039 ай бұрын
I've been to this farm for a tour. Lemmi say Their coffee is heavenly.
@geraldgm12179 ай бұрын
A Coffee ☕️ Masterclass!!!!! PERFECT !!!!!!!!!!!❤❤❤
@DaniMeharina-iw2ds9 ай бұрын
I live in USA 🇺🇸 and it’s true . He genius and that’s why I love Kenya 🇰🇪
@marythuo33599 ай бұрын
Lynn ngugi always with the best interview
@ephalinamaina32789 ай бұрын
Quite inspiring to help the youth take up agribusiness if they develop passion.
@HassanAhmed-ge7vv9 ай бұрын
Gitau that was a great woman you have.
@winnymuusi78059 ай бұрын
Lynn this so insightful to me kindly bring more agribusinesses ❤❤❤❤❤
@kamal1719 ай бұрын
I'm from us 35 years of consuming coffee best coffee I ever test is Kenya coffee
@karimidorcas15219 ай бұрын
the best video ever.. i will visit them one day
@elizabethngulale46648 ай бұрын
wow.... Agriculture is the way to go.... Thanks for the info.
@lizo78989 ай бұрын
This is great cannot wait to taste it and be a regular consumer. I just visited the website saw there are non resident fees , which would be a slight turnaway to foreign visitors, how about considering one rate for all visitors, apply the average. Same way you visit a different country you pay the same prices as citizens. Equal treatment for all.
@ichooseviolence25329 ай бұрын
How do I get that badge
@Mylove-boo9 ай бұрын
Those are just tour fees and I suppose the 'foreigners' may not mind paying. Like he said it is the non locals that visit more. I guess you make the hay while the sun still shines.
@brayodomkibue94169 ай бұрын
This gave me Yellowstone vibe.....this amazing 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@lucilleparker88279 ай бұрын
Wow! We are getting inspired here so now Lets Go farming!😊
@perpetuakanyutu261012 күн бұрын
Excellent information.. super good marketing for their brand 😁
@bettylaban96969 ай бұрын
Why hadn't I watched this earlier? It's so interesting
@Ohole7 ай бұрын
Amen brother Mathew 6:33!!!
@Kibegirl9 ай бұрын
I love the brown background...feels coffe ish
@Lwgetz9 ай бұрын
This is very inspiring, and they are blessed but what exactly is the cost?? That is where rubber meets the road. I am very invested in the value add as a coffee farmer myself and weuh....
@wilsonwahome6479 ай бұрын
Very enlightening, we want more of such content...
@abitu479 ай бұрын
That's the exact problem in Kenya. Everyone wants to do what they see someone doing without knowing how to go about it, they they just jump from one thing to another without success. The Kenyan Government is also to blame because they don't support and encourage farmers. During our days, i remember they used to provide seedlings, manure, and even used to spray the entire Nation to kill mosquitoes and other pests. What happened to Kenya?
@bobm86379 ай бұрын
Great conversation, very informative. Also, what caught my attention is that you cannot trust workers. Where did we Kenyans get this habbit or robbing our employers? I worked for a company where even senior managers earning over 200k were stealing simple, cheap products from the company. For sure our politicians, police, civil service are a reflection of us. We need to bring up our children differently to rid ourselves of this terrible vice. Without integrity, you have nothing. 😢 But I can see hope with technology and the more informed generations coming up.
@catemiss..8 ай бұрын
Mekenze Limiri and George should watch this❤❤
@LikizoB9 ай бұрын
This was a very good interview. I have learned a lot
@dwamburu19 ай бұрын
G G Kareithi was known for his sharp dressing code.
@IrushKansas9 ай бұрын
I heard my dad make jokes on us when we were well dressed mentioning Kareithi.
@tonieve789 ай бұрын
This is awesome. I love it.
@CalebMaina-lf5po9 ай бұрын
I can now understand why coffee farmers remain the poorest,,,,when you take away the cost of production from that 80bob ,,,you are left almost with nothing
@ngurekim62789 ай бұрын
There's a side of the Kenyan coffee story that cannot be discussed openly. It is a dangerous side. First, the banking industry in Kenya eats from the coffee cooperatives. The leaders are elected if they can promise to take loans on behalf of their respective co-ops, wakulima wapende wasipende. For the banks, coffee co-ops is how you guarantee your annual profits without thinking. If a chairman or committee member becomes a roadblock, a new election has to take place. Once you take the loans, it is up to you as leaders to decide what to do with the millions. You could buy an extra lorry or 2, build an extra store (even if you already have 4 empty ones....), or just split the amounts between yourselves . Farmers have no say. Lazima watalipa loan. Meanwhile in the market, brokers and their cartels have a grip of the ecosystem like shimo ya matatu. One wrong move against them, you could easily find yourself on the obituary page. The coffee world in Kenya is very dark.
@CalebMaina-lf5po9 ай бұрын
@@ngurekim6278 can what Gachagua is saying about eliminating cartel's be possible? And if possible, will the farmers be getting the best out of farming?
@ngurekim62789 ай бұрын
@@CalebMaina-lf5po The noise that he is making is positive energy. Atleast, the Presidency is in the game. That's a good thing. As to whether the many vultures that hover around the coffee space will be scared away, that's something you have to wait & see. If farmers are emboldened by the government to the point where they can fight the banks and other scavengers, the landscape will definitely change. Meanwhile, if more and more private farms begin to do what Karunguru is doing, the brokers and their cartels will have to re-imagine their own game. If private farms or companies take charge of both ends - the farming and marketing ends, cartels kwisha!
@CalebMaina-lf5po9 ай бұрын
@@ngurekim6278 good point although Kenyan farmers believe that someone else will help them, their mindset makes them vulnerable,. What is the take of the banks in all this?
@ngurekim62789 ай бұрын
@@CalebMaina-lf5po There's a very bad thing that happened when Kenya became independent. Political elites were able to create the mindset that government exists to "help" citizens. The idea of "serikali kutuletea maendeleo" is only found in Kenya. This is the worst thing to have happened to us. A terrible mindset. Meanwhile, corporate entities in Kenya have always found a way to make abnormal profits by taking advantage of Kenyans. The banking sector is the most notorious. They trap co-ops into situationships. Forcing hefty loans on co-ops is an addiction that the banking sector will struggle to overcome.
@justinaopit9 ай бұрын
Please ask karuguru to coosider making tea from the leaves. Read about it and see
@bitsgraffix9 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed watching this guy
@labokibet51353 ай бұрын
The best information ever
@Christambassadors-20239 ай бұрын
Good morning, Kenyan east regions Tree 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 🌳 God bless you 🐑🙌🏻💪