SAO PAULO, May 11 — Brazil’s arabica harvest kicked off symbolically this weekend with volunteers picking through one of the world’s largest urban coffee farms at Sao Paulo’s Instituto Biológico, a hub of agricultural research in the middle of the metropolis.

In the shadow of the institute’s towering art-deco headquarters, the group worked its way through neat rows of 2,000 trees, marvelling at the pastoral scene just a stone’s throw from the city’s central Ibirapuera Park.

“I couldn’t believe that here in Sao Paulo there’s a place like this with a coffee plantation,” said Luciano Caporroz, a lawyer volunteering in the harvest. “It’s like therapy, right?”

Founded in the fight against the coffee borer beetle, the 93-year-old institute continues to research agricultural pests and donates most of its annual 600kg harvest to charity.

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Prior harvests have drawn as many as 1,500 visitors to the institute. But this year organizers invited a smaller group of volunteers with ties to the institute, due to precautions during the Covid-19 pandemic. — Reuters