Los titos organic Farm

Los Titos Organic Farm is a living, breathing ecosystem in Turrialba, Costa Rica where we don't just grow food, we regenerate the Earth.

Beyond organic. Welcome to the Soil Revolution!

For over a century, this land has been in our family. Today, we are taking it a step further. We are actively moving away from the rigid, sterile rows of industrial farming and transforming Los Titos into a syntropic, regenerative agroforestry system.

Instead of fighting nature, we mimic it. We are building a "forest-like system" where every plant has a purpose.

  • Our Staples: High-quality organic coffee and nutrient-dense bananas (the very same ones we dehydrate to make your MAKALA snacks).

  • The Soil Protectors: Intercrop species like cacao, yuca, ginger, and botón de oro, alongside native timber trees.

  • The Mission: Every root we plant works to trap carbon, fix nitrogen, and bring dead soil back to life.

We Share This Land With 50+ Species (And Counting)

Industrial agriculture treats wildlife as an inconvenience. We treat them as neighbors. Because we refuse to spray synthetic poisons, Los Titos has become a sanctuary for biodiversity.

When you eat a MAKALA snack, you are supporting a farm that provides a safe home for:

  • The Canopy Dwellers: Sloths and over 50 species of native and migratory birds.

  • The Ground Crew: Armadillos, foraging wildlife, and rich soil organisms.

  • The Pollinators: Wild bees and insects that keep the entire ecosystem thriving.

"If your farm doesn't buzz, hum, and crawl, you're not farming. You're just running a factory open to the sky.”

From Our Soil to Your Hands

The backbone of MAKALA’s dehydrated fruit line comes directly from the bananas grown right here at Los Titos Organic Farm.

By keeping it direct, we ensure three things:

  1. Uncompromised Soil: No chemical runoffs, ever.

  2. Human Health: Clean, real food that hasn't been stripped of its nutrients by industrial processing.

  3. True Transparency: You know exactly where your food comes from, down to the specific patch of volcanic soil in Turrialba.