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Abaca Hemp - Making Money In Your Own Backyard

πŸ“… 2025-02-25⏱ 16:11
πŸ“… 2025-02-25 Β |Β  ⏱️ 16:11 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 60.1K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 7.1K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1.3K comments

Pea travels deep into rural Philippines to visit an abaca farmer named Kuya Julius, documenting how provincial Filipinos survive through micro-agricultural businesses. The video is part field trip, part economics lesson, showing the grueling manual labor behind one of the Philippines' most important export crops β€” and the gap between the country's dominance in global abaca production and the poverty of the farmers who actually harvest it.

Abaca as a globally important Philippine crop ​

  • Abaca belongs to the banana tree family but has a darker bark than regular banana trees
  • The Philippines has been producing abaca since the pre-colonial era and is the world's largest exporter, producing roughly 85% of global supply
  • Ecuador is the second-largest producer, followed by Costa Rica
  • Uses include banknotes (currencies worldwide use abaca fiber), textiles, ropes, sails, bags, shoes, wallets, and manila envelopes β€” which are literally named after Manila hemp (another name for abaca fiber)
  • Pea also mentions "nipis," a sheer, almost see-through cloth made from abaca fiber, joking that if a Filipina wears it "you sure would see her nippβ€”"

The disconnect between the crop's value and the farmers' reality ​

  • Despite abaca being a huge cash crop, the Philippine government doesn't take full advantage of its potential
  • A few manufacturing facilities exist up north, but the rest of the abaca farmers are left to eke out a meager living doing tedious manual work by hand
  • Kuya Julius has to walk about a kilometer through the jungle on foot every day just to reach his work area

Meet Kuya Julius β€” the abaca farmer ​

  • 32 years old, has been farming abaca since age 16 β€” learned from his father
  • Supports a family of six: his wife and four children
  • Abaca farming is his only source of income, and he plans to do it for the rest of his life
  • Trees take about 3 years to grow to maturity
  • Planting is done from bulbs, not seeds β€” one tree produces about four bulbs, so there's a natural replenishment cycle and he never worries about running out

The harvesting and processing workflow ​

  • Pea participates in each step, attempting (with mixed success) to do the work herself
  • Step 1: Cutting the tree β€” Done with a machete, cut from the bottom; Pea chops one down herself and asks Kuya Julius for a job
  • Step 2: Hauling β€” The harvested tree trunk must be carried uphill through the jungle to the processing area; Pea notes "chivalry is not dead" as Julius carries it, and calls it "a tough job for a young man"
  • Step 3: Peeling the bark β€” The outer bark is stripped away to get to the inner layers; the good fiber has a yellowish color
  • Step 4: Extracting the fiber β€” Done on a homemade improvised machine Julius built himself, consisting of wood and metal; you clamp the bark and pull the fiber out; Pea tries and struggles, producing some short, low-quality fiber ("yikes, I'm terrible at this")
  • Step 5: Drying β€” Fibers are hung to dry; takes about 1 hour in full sun, but can take 2-3 days in rainy weather; dried fiber looks like a wig ("like the nearest Tarzan")
  • A buyer comes directly to Julius to purchase the finished product β€” he doesn't have to take it to market

The economics β€” sobering numbers ​

  • One abaca tree of harvestable size yields only about 1/4 kilo of fiber
  • That means you need four full trees to produce one kilo
  • Julius cuts about a dozen trees per day
  • Abaca fiber sells for 165 pesos per kilo (roughly $3 US)
  • In a good week, Julius can produce about 20 kilos
  • Weekly earnings at full production: approximately 3,300 pesos (~$60 US) to support six people
  • The juice from the tree is drinkable

Pea's framing of provincial life ​

  • When you explore provincial Philippines, you see lots of people but hardly any businesses
  • The answer to "what do they do all day" is usually right in their backyards β€” micro-businesses involving agriculture
  • It doesn't make them rich, but "in many cases it's the difference between life and death"

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