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RE: Mango Harvest and Land Diversification

I cannot get guavas here, and on the sole occasion I was able to taste a guava (which variety I cannot recall), I found it to be a sublime and delicious fruit, likely even preferable to my favorite fruit, raspberry.

I would be one consumer for a product that enabled folks here to indulge in guavas, such as a pulp or concentrate from which I could make juice. I realize that packaging and shipping a frozen concentrate product entails significant expenses and time to bring to market, but thought I'd mention it as a possible consideration for future development, as I have little else useful I can contribute to help you overcome your challenges.

I do admire your perseverance and incredibly hard work. I have long admired farmers generally, having been very impressed when working with them on occasion, but your particular circumstances and indomitable efforts to overcome them have strongly commended you personally. If what you face can be overcome, you will overcome it. Of that I am confident.

If I can somehow assist, you have but to ask, and I will do what I can.

Thanks!

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hahaha and to think I give the majority of the guavas here to the pigs, they are so abundant here, and there's not really a huge market for them locally. I make jars of guava preserves every season and sell those. They are good if you have a sweet tooth (which I don't have).

I am definitely at a point of feeling the heat, the hits just keep on coming. But you know what, I am happy and healthy, and somehow I always pull through.

I appreciate your motivation and kind words more than you can imagine, and that in itself is a great help.