Coffee Stories · Life on the Road
Colombia — Where the Coffee Tastes Like Freedom
This one is for my son.
This one is for my son. Read it when you're older and understand why I smile whenever someone puts a Colombian coffee in front of me.
It was the early nineties. No internet. No Instagram. No way of truly knowing who anyone was beyond what they showed you in person — and what they showed us was extraordinary.
I was lucky enough to compete in sports at a level that took me all around the world. Sport has this beautiful way of building friendships across borders, languages, and cultures that nothing else quite replicates. Some of my favourite people on earth were on the Colombian national team, and we became friends for life. I didn't know then — none of us really did — exactly who was behind the curtain funding their travels, their planes, their pilots. It was a different era. You trusted people based on how they treated you, and these people treated us like gold.
After the World Championships, my Australian friend and I decided to stay on and travel with them for a while. What followed was one of the most surreal and unforgettable adventures of my life.
We made our way from Medellín to Cali, and then one afternoon we found ourselves on a private tarmac being ushered toward a sleek jet. The man in charge — El Jefe, as everyone called him — was also the pilot. Before we boarded, he turned to us casually and asked, "You guys hungry?" Within minutes, a limousine pulled up alongside the plane and a woman stepped out carrying a basket — fresh burgers, fries, and juice. Just like that, on a runway, like it was the most normal thing in the world.
There were six of us on the plane. As we crossed over the Panama Canal at altitude, El Jefe banked the plane sideways so we could all look down at it. I nearly lost my burger. We laughed until it hurt.
Our destination was San Andrés — a small, jewel-like island in the Caribbean. Our host, it turned out, owned most of it. We spent our days playing beach volleyball, tearing around in tropical rain on four-wheel motorbikes, and cycling through lush green roads with armed guards riding in 4WD's ahead and behind us. We never asked why. You just didn't. It wasn't fear — it was a kind of unspoken respect for a world that operated by its own rules.
Because here's the thing: these people were, by any measure, deeply generous human beings. They were pumping enormous amounts of money back into their communities — supporting local sport, helping young families, giving kids opportunities that otherwise simply wouldn't have existed. Whatever was unfolding in the world behind the curtain — and in time, things did unravel in a big way — what I witnessed in those days was warmth, generosity, and a genuine love of life.
Their properties were something else — a neighbour kept a real lion. Our friends had around nine hundred horses and a fleet of exotic, very shiny, very fast, very bulletproof cars. And yet, I'll tell you honestly: the moment I laughed the hardest the entire trip was sitting around an open fire one evening playing a simple game of cards. Nothing fancy. Just people, a fire, and cards.
Colombia itself stole my heart in the quieter moments too. The traffic was glorious chaos — nobody followed any rules and somehow everyone arrived exactly where they needed to go, completely calm. I loved that about the place. A country running on its own beautiful logic.
And the coffee. Oh, the coffee. You'd walk past a corner spot — just a little terrace, cement floor, a few red plastic Coca-Cola chairs set out in the sun — and there it would be. Perfect, fresh, black Colombian coffee. A local man, a few teeth fewer than most, would look up and offer you the most genuinely warm smile you've ever seen and say hola. That smile. That coffee. That was Colombia.
My friends had farms, and good coffee was never more than an arm's reach away. Though I'll admit — at eighteen I still preferred a fresh juice! I've caught up since.
The story didn't end well for some of them. When you play in that world, the odds eventually catch up. But I feel nothing but gratitude for having known them and for everything I witnessed. Somehow, being international, being athletes — we existed in a kind of protected bubble. I'm not sure we fully appreciated it at the time.
If you ever find a good Colombian coffee bean, sit with it. Enjoy it slowly. Think of a country full of people who have very little and somehow carry more joy than most people I've met anywhere. Think of a fire, a card game, a limo appearing from nowhere on a runway, and a little island in the Caribbean that felt, for a few days, like it belonged to us.
It's on my list of favourite places on earth. It always will be. Gracias Colombia!
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