Coffee parchment drying on raised African beds at the Altieri finca in Boquete
Altieri · Boquete · Post-harvest (year-round)

The days that decide what a coffee becomes.

A cherry is only a promise. What happens after the harvest — on the drying beds, at the sorting table, in the cup — decides what it becomes. You spend those days inside the work, at the Altieri finca in Boquete.

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This is not a tour. It is not a class. It is a few days inside the work that turns a cherry into a coffee.

Apprenti Trips — because one life isn't enough
The Altieri coffee finca in the highlands of Boquete, Panama
Altieri · Boquete

Up in the Boquete highlands, the coffee is still becoming itself.

The Altieri finca sits in the mountains of Boquete, where the harvest is only the beginning. Long after the cherries come off the tree, the coffee is still deciding what it will taste like — on the beds, in the sorting, in the cup.

You come year-round. There is no season to wait for. The post-harvest work runs all year, and you step into it beside the people who do it. Up to four apprentices at a time. Never a group.

What you'll do

From wet parchment to a lot worth a buyer's attention.

01

The raised beds

Turn and monitor the coffee on raised African beds, reading how it dries in the mountain air.

02

Moisture & time

Track the drying day by day to the point that holds — not too fast, and not too far.

03

Hand sorting

Pull defects out by hand, so only sound beans stay in the lot.

04

The cupping table

Taste what the lot became — sweetness, acidity, body, and the faults you learn to name.

05

Grading

Score the coffee and separate what reaches specialty grade from what does not.

06

A sample-ready lot

Build a small lot, bagged and ready to send to a buyer — the end of the days that decided it.

A taster evaluating coffee at the cupping table
The days that decide

You won't watch the cupping. You'll cup.

Quality control is not a demonstration here. You stand at the beds, you sort with your hands, and you sit at the cupping table beside the people whose judgment sets the grade. Real trades, real people, real conditions.

By the end, you understand a truth most coffee drinkers never meet: the cup is decided long after the harvest, in the quiet, exacting days that come after. You come home with their point of view, not a souvenir.

3+ days
Days on the finca
Max 4
Apprentices, never a group
Year-round
No season to wait for
Boquete
Panama highlands
Good to know

Questions, answered.

When can I go?
Year-round. The post-harvest work runs all year at the Altieri finca in Boquete, so there is no season to wait for — you come when the days suit you.
Do I need experience?
None at all. No prior background is required. What matters is attention and the willingness to work slowly and carefully with your hands.
How many people at a time?
Up to four apprentices. Never a group. You work close enough to the beds and the cupping table to have real attention.
How long is it?
Three days or more at the finca — long enough to follow a lot through drying, sorting, cupping, and grading.
What will I actually do?
Monitor the raised beds, sort defects by hand, sit at the cupping table, grade what reaches specialty, and help build a small, sample-ready lot.
Is Altieri open to book now?
We're opening the first post-harvest apprenticeships at Altieri. Join the waitlist and we'll write to you first, with dates and details, before it goes live.
Altieri · Boquete · Launching

Be one of the first apprentices at Altieri.

We're opening the first post-harvest apprenticeships at the finca. Leave your email and we'll write to you first, with dates and details.

No spam. One note when the first dates open.

Altieri · Boquete · waitlist
Join the waitlist