Rain, no vog appear to be helping Kona coffee crop, though diseases and labor shortage present challenges

Rain water drips from coffee cherry at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms in Holualoa on Friday. Visible on some of the leaves and cherry is cercospora leaf spot, also known as “berry blotch” or Cercospora coffeicola, creates “brown eye-spots” and tends to cause coffee trees’ cherry to ripen prematurely. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)
Green coffee cherry is not yet ripe Friday at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms in Holualoa. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)
Rain blanketed Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms early Friday afternoon. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)
Rain water drips from coffee cherry at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms in Holualoa on Friday. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

Coffee cherry is ready to be picked at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms in Holualoa on Friday. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

A muddy trail leads through acres of coffee Friday at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms in Holualoa. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)
Rain blanketed Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms early Friday afternoon. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

Ray Taggart, farm manager at Heavenly Hawaiian Coffee Farms, looks out over the acres of coffee grown at the Holualoa farm on Friday. (Photos by Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

KAILUA-KONA — A combination of above-average rainfall and vog-free skies appears to have set up Kona coffee farmers for a better season this year, but a couple challenges are cropping up.