Where the Cacao Grows

Capoeira and cacao share the same Bahian soil, the same hands, the same community. Mestre Bico Duro walks us through Fazenda Jesus de Deus, the farm whose beans become Agroverse's ceremonial cacao and chocolate.

Same soil, two paths

The cacao that becomes Agroverse's chocolate is grown a few kilometers from where Bico Duro and the kids practice the roda. Same coast, same families. The ways you can support each, though, run on separate tracks — and that distinction is on purpose.

Buy Agroverse ceremonial cacao or chocolate, and you fund one cacao tree planted in the Brazilian Amazon. The trees-financed count is live at truesight.me.

Give directly to Tribo Mirim, and your donation reaches Bico Duro through Wise to Brazil. Every dollar is tracked publicly on the transparency ledger.

One restores the forest. The other keeps the after-school program running. The community both serve is the same.

Read the Partnership Story

Agroverse published a long-form blog about how the partnership with Mestre Bico Duro came together — capoeira fitness, cacao circle gatherings, and the broader vision for the community.

Read on agroverse.shop →

Same community. Two ways to help it grow.

Plant a tree — Shop Agroverse → Fund the program — Donate →