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Namau good Samaritan friend
may lead to a chocolate factory
Samisoni Pareti
Cocoa growers like
Tevita Niuva harbour a deep secret that is revolutionary
in form and shape.
They want to re-draw the coat
of arms depicted on Fiji's national flag.
Instead
of the golden lion holding fast to a cocoa pod with his
two powerful claws, Niuva wants to see that single cocoa
pod plucked free from the beast's hold.
"We will
only do that if we produce more cocoa and the price of
the product is kept enticingly high," the Tailevu cocoa
grower told Fiji Business.
"With our friends in
Sweden promising to lend a hand, we may just get the
opportunity to see a cocoa factory open right here in
Tailevu."
By the last quarter of 2007, cocoa
prices were indeed lucrative at F$2 a
kilogramme.
This is a far cry from the depressing
years of the mid-1990s when prices dipped to as low as
60 cents a kilogramme, Niuva told the
magazine.
The Swedish friends he mentioned are
actually members of the Cocoa Bello Organisation, a non
government group of cocoa growers and chocolate
manufacturers in Scandinavia.
Their involvement
in Fiji cocoa is nothing short of a miracle in many
ways.
Cocoa Bello executive Fabian Rimfors was on
holiday in Fiji in 2002 and happened to take a bus on
the sometimes atrocious Kings Road, the main
thoroughfare along the north and eastern parts of Viti
Levu (Fiji's main island) that links Suva, the national
capital, to the western city of Lautoka.
"Fabian
saw the cocoa farms on the Wainibuka stretch of the
Kings Road and on his arrival in Suva made enquiries to
the status of cocoa as an industry.
"He was
directed to the Ministry of Agriculture who referred him
to cocoa growers here in Namau."
That referral
turned the tide for Niuva and his family of cocoa
growers who live on a plateau that is Namau, not far
from the Lodoni valley in the district of Sawakasa in
Tailevu North.
The Tailevu coast is about two
kilometres to the east and from the under constructed
Korovou-QVS highway, Namau is only 6 to 8 minutes drive
away.
From that holiday in 2002, Fabian developed
a relationship with Niuva and his group of cocoa growers
at Namau when they hosted Fabian and some members of his
Cocoa Bello group in early 2007.
The Swedish
visitors not only toured cocoa farms in Tailevu, but
also encouraged and demonstrated ways to produce
chocolate bars and chocolate drinks.
Even recipes
for making chocolates were imprinted on t-shirts and
widely distributed.
The relationship didn't end
there. In mid-September of 2007, Niuva was among a group
of eight men and women flown to Sweden by Cocoa Bello
for a two-week visit.
For the trip, Niuva and one
other cocoa farmer at Namau took along samples of Namau
chocolate.
Marketed as high quality organic
chocolate, the product was a hit in Sweden. It attracted
nationwide television and newspaper coverage.
A
major attraction was the Namau chocolate wrappings;
chocolate bars wrapped in tapa (made from the bark of
the mulberry tree) strips and stored in gift pandana
baskets.
"That was my mother's idea, and she
weaved the gift baskets herself," said Niuva.
"We
also took along three ripe cocoa pods and vanilla
samples that we grow here in Namau."
As a
full-time cocoa farmer, Niuva felt blessed that he took
the Swedish trip.
To say what he saw was an eye
opener would be an understatement.
"We attended a
seminar at the Swedish University of Agriculture for a
couple of days and I can't get over the way science has
made it possible for Sweden to produce countless number
of by-products of cocoa.
"The list is almost
endless and we were inspired to work harder and see
cocoa as a vibrant and thriving growth
sector."
Before the Swedish trip, Niuva assisted
by his wife and children had been working very
hard-prunning their almost 10,000 cocoa trees,
harvesting them every six months, splitting the pods
open to dry the cocoa beans, roasting and peeling them,
before the beans are finally grinded by hand.
The
latter process can be the most difficult as the grinding
of cocoa beans can take at least eight hours before they
turn into liquid form.
From here, the liquefied
cocoa is poured into stainless steel pans and baked to
harden into chocolate bars.
Before they are
wrapped with tapa, Namau chocolate bars are first
covered with foil.
Some are sold in their
miniature gift pandana baskets while others come in tapa
pouches.
Explains Niuva: "Namau chocolates are of
course in their infancy stages. But it was impressed
upon us by our Swedish counterparts, that our edge would
be that our chocolate is organic.
"This was not
so hard a transition because we have never used
fertilisers on our cocoa trees. One thing I learnt from
our recent trip to Sweden is, apart from the packaging,
we also need to work on getting our unique chocolate
taste. This will also be what keeps us apart from the
rest and it is something I think we have almost
achieved."
For flavours, Niuva and his family are
experimenting with vanilla or cinnamon.
It was
raining by the bucket-full on the day we called on Niuva
and his family at their Namau farm, exactly the kind of
day to have a cup of hot chocolate. I had several and
the rain gave the best excuse.
For Niuva, such a
day gives him added reasons to remain indoors and work
his hand-held grinder.
He said Cocoa Bello is
interested in building a chocolate factory in the
province, but Niuva is not wishing for any miracles to
make it happen.
"If the factory idea does come
true or not, it won't affect my plans to continue to
plant and maintain my cocoa farm. I'm not going to wait
by the roadside for miracles to happen or for government
to give me hand-outs.
"I hate hand-outs. I
believe farmers should just work hard."
At least
Niuva needs no telling of the formula that will ensure
the cocoa pod on the grasp of the mighty lion depicted
on Fiji's national flag is freed.
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