Crates of freshly picked red coffee cherries at the Altieri finca in Boquete
Altieri · Boquete · Harvest (Dec–Mar)

For three months a year, the mountain turns red.

The coffee ripens all at once, and the whole finca fills with colour. You come while the picking is on — following the cherry from the branch to the fermentation bed, three days or more beside an expert agrónomo. Four travelers at most. Never a group.

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This is not a tour. It is not a class. It is a few days inside someone else's working life.

Apprenti Trips — because one life isn't enough
A coffee picker moving through the rows during the Boquete harvest
Why the season matters

The mountain only turns red from December to March.

In Boquete the coffee ripens on its own clock. For a few short months the cherries turn from green to deep red across the whole finca, and every hand is needed to bring them in before they fall. You cannot manufacture the harvest. You can only arrive while it is happening.

Which is why this apprenticeship exists inside one narrow window each year. When the picking ends, so does the chance to stand in it. The waitlist is how you hold a place for the next one.

How the days move

Absorb, contemplate, make, close — the harvest, in four turns.

01 · Absorb

Walk the finca at first light

You start where the agrónomo starts — in the rows before the heat. You learn to read the trees and to see which cherries have turned and which need another day on the branch.

02 · Contemplate

Understand what the red means

Altitude, shade, ripeness, timing. The agrónomo shows you why the reddest cherry carries the most sugar, and how a single day of picking will shape the cup months from now.

03 · Make

Pick, sort, pulp, and lay the bed

You pick by hand and sort by colour. Then you pulp the fruit and lay the beans onto the fermentation bed yourself — the whole path from branch to bed, done with your own hands.

04 · Close

Taste where the season is heading

At the end you sit with the agrónomo and taste through the days ahead of your lot. You leave knowing what your morning of picking becomes, and how a specialty coffee is actually born.

The Altieri coffee finca on the mountainside in Boquete, Panama
Your host

An expert agrónomo who knows every row of the finca.

At Altieri you are not handed to a guide. You work beside an agrónomo who reads this mountain the way a master reads their craft — the soil, the shade, the ripeness, the timing of the pick. You won't watch a demonstration. You'll stand in the rows and learn the way it has always been learned, by doing and by paying attention.

One to four apprentices at a time. Never a group. No experience needed — only attention, and the willingness to work at the pace the season sets. You come home with their point of view, not a souvenir.

Dec–Mar
Seasonal · harvest only
3+ days
You set the length
Max 4
Travelers, never a group
Agrónomo
Guided start to finish
Coffee beans spread across raised fermentation and drying beds
What your picking becomes

From your hands on the branch to a bed of quiet, fermenting fruit.

The cherries you pick don't vanish into a factory. You carry them from the tree to the bed and watch the first hours of what turns a fruit into a coffee. It is slow, exact work, and it decides everything that follows.

Most travel gives you pictures. A harvest gives you the memory of a season you were actually inside — and a new way of tasting every cup after.

Join the waitlist →
Good to know

Questions, answered.

When can I go?
Only during the harvest, roughly December to March. That is the one stretch of the year when the cherries are on the tree and the picking is on. Outside that window there is nothing to bring in — which is why the season fills quickly and the waitlist matters.
Do I need coffee experience?
None at all. The agrónomo starts you where you are. What matters is attention and the willingness to work with your hands at the pace the season sets.
How many people are there?
Four travelers at most, never a group. Fewer hands means you stay close to the agrónomo and actually do the work rather than watch it.
How long does it last?
Three days or more. Three days is the minimum to follow the cherry from the branch to the fermentation bed; we set the exact length with you when you join the waitlist.
What does it cost?
Altieri is launching, so dates and full pricing are confirmed with each traveler before anything is booked. Join the waitlist and we share the details and the price with you first, with no obligation to go ahead.
How do I hold a place?
Leave your email on the harvest-season waitlist below. When the next December-to-March dates open, waitlist members hear first and choose their days before anyone else.
Altieri · Boquete · Harvest (Dec–Mar)

Step into the life of a coffee harvest.

The next harvest runs December to March, with four travelers at a time. Leave your email and we'll write you first when the dates open.

No card, no commitment. Just the first word when the season opens.

Dec–Mar · seasonal · max 4
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