Global Projects

Protecting and helping nature doesn’t just stop on our farms

We’ve set our sights further afield…

Boosting biodiversity around the world

Helping nature doesn’t just start and end at home, we know it has to be a global effort. That’s why we’re helping nature with projects in the Bolivian rainforest and Californian almond groves to help keep our world bursting with nature.

Bolivian Brazil Nuts

Protecting the Amazon, one Brazil nut at a time.

We love Brazil nuts. They go brilliantly with the crunchy golden clusters we bake, but there’s more to Brazil nuts than meets the eye. Take the fact that most of them actually come from Bolivia for a start. And that they’re wild-harvested from deep in the Amazon rainforest.

By working with CIPCA (Bolivian Centre for Research and Promotion of Small farmers) we help support 15 communities in the Bolivian Amazon to help make sure they and the rainforest (where brazil nuts come from) are kept as healthy as possible. Creating tree nurseries, facilitating trail clean ups, health education alongside training around how to keep brazil nut trees and their forests healthy are just some of the things that we help them do. In fact, as part of this in 2019 over 37,000 seedlings were nurtured to help replenish Brazil Nut trees in the Amazon.

This all makes Brazil nuts a bit of a super-star, because by supporting Amazonian communities, we help support the case for keeping the rainforest as it is and help to keep the Amazon bursting with brazil nuts and bursting with nature.

Vincent Vos, a local collaborator of the project, sums it up:

“Currently large parts of the amazon are under severe threat of conversion to cattle ranches and agribusiness crops. As such, habitat destruction is the main cause of biodiversity loss in the region. CIPCA helps to generate economic alternatives based on the sustainable harvest of forest products including the brazil nuts, cacao and acai-berries, while also promoting the restoration of amazon forests through the implementation of agroforestry systems, that not only generate food security and income for the local families, but also help bring back biodiversity and ecosystem functioning of the Amazon.”

SEEDS

FOR BEES

Keeping things buzzing in California

Along with Brazil nuts, almonds are one of the nuts that we love most (and we know quite a few of you are pretty keen on them too). But almonds need a little help to get growing. According to the WWF, 75% of leading global crops depend on animal pollination. That includes the almond groves of California where honeybees are vital to allow almonds to grow.

Normally, almond trees are grown in large orchards, with thousands of almonds trees blooming at once. Whilst this sounds beautiful, just having one type of plant isn’t brilliant for nature, particularly not for the bees & other pollinators that are needed to pollinate the trees. The presence of only one type of tree means that bees have little else to eat if the almonds bloom late, and no-one wants starving bees! That’s why we work with Project Apis m. as part of their ‘Seeds for Bees’ www.projectapism.org/seeds-for-bees project.

‘Seeds for Bees’ helps to keep honey bees healthy and boost the biodiversity of almond groves by planting a mixture of pollinator supportive plants in amongst the almond trees. This gives bees a ‘bee buffet’ to enjoy when the almonds aren’t blooming.

What’s good for bees is of course good for other pollinators too, so biodiversity is boosted all-round. The project also benefits the soil health of almond orchards, as the roots of the plants improve the health of the soil, allowing precious rainwater to filter more effectively through the soil and make almond orchards more sustainable.

In 2021, we’re supporting the growth of over 700 acres of these plants– that’s a bee buffet the size of around 11,000 tennis courts!