Good coffee husbandry is a meticulous balance of timing, nutrition, and protection. Given your target parameters—specifically that precise Density of 820–850 g/L and AA/AB screen sizes—your field management must focus on maximizing nutrient delivery to the cherry during the expansion phase.
Here is the breakdown of the factors and a seasonal calendar to keep your harvest on track.
Key Factors of Good Coffee Husbandry
To achieve the high-quality physical specs you’ve saved (like that a_w of 0.52–0.58), you need to manage these four pillars:

  • Vegetative Balance: Proper pruning ensures the tree doesn’t overproduce small, low-density “lights.”
  • Nutrient Timing: Coffee is a heavy feeder. Fertilizer must be available when the tree is “sinking” energy into the fruit.
  • Soil Health: pH levels (ideally 5.5–6.5) dictate how well the tree absorbs your inputs.
  • Phytosanitary Control: Managing Leaf Rust (CLR) and Coffee Berry Borer (CBB) prevents premature leaf drop and bean damage.
    The Coffee Management Calendar
    This calendar follows the standard cycle for Arabica. Note: Adjust by 1 month depending on your specific local “short” or “long” rainy seasons.
  1. Post-Harvest & Dormancy (The Foundation)
  • Pruning: Immediately after harvest. Remove “primary” branches that have bore fruit for 3 years, suckers, and deadwood. This redirects energy to the new wood that will carry next year’s AA-sized beans.
  • Soil Sampling: Test your soil now. If your terminal pH in processing is hitting 4.3–4.5, ensure your soil isn’t becoming too acidic, which can stress the plant.
  1. Pre-Flowering & Flowering (The Initiation)
  • Nutrition: Apply high-phosphorus fertilizer to encourage root growth and flower initiation.
  • Pest Scouting: Watch for Thrips and Aphids that attack delicate new blossoms.
  1. Berry Expansion & Hardening (The “Size” Phase)
  • Feeding: This is the most critical window for your Screen Size 17/18 goals. Apply Nitrogen and Potassium (K_2O). Potassium is the “pump” that moves water and nutrients into the berry to increase density.
  • Disease Management: Spray fungicides to prevent Coffee Berry Disease (CBD) and Leaf Rust. If the leaves fall off now, the berries won’t have the sugar (Brix) you need.
  1. Ripening & Maturation (The “Quality” Phase)
  • Foliar Feeds: Apply Boron and Zinc to help with uniform ripening.
  • CBB Control: Set traps for Coffee Berry Borers.
  • Husbandry: Maintain a clean “plate” (the area under the tree canopy) to prevent soil-borne pests from climbing.
    Management Summary Table
    | Task | Timing | Primary Goal |
    |—|—|—|
    | Pruning | Post-Harvest | Open canopy for light; stimulate new fruiting wood. |
    | Fertilizing (NPK) | Onset of rains | Support bean density (820-850 g/L). |
    | Mulching | Start of dry season | Retain moisture for the 33-hour soak phase later. |
    | IPM Scouting | Monthly | Early detection of Leaf Rust and Borer. |
    Pest & Disease Cheat Sheet
  • Coffee Leaf Rust (CLR): Look for orange powdery spots. Control with copper-based fungicides or systemic triazoles.
  • Coffee Berry Borer (CBB): Tiny holes at the apex of the cherry. Manage via “sanitation” (picking up all fallen berries) and Broca traps.
  • Antestia Bug: Causes “potato taste” and flower abortion. Managed through canopy thinning and targeted sprays.

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