Our Ayurvedic super botanicals provide a rejuvenating elixir. Real ingredients, delicious and nourishing, as mother nature intended.
Bhoomi reflects the principles of Ayurveda—an ancient, 6,000-year-old form of Indian health science that’s all about balance. To support balanced health, we infuse cane water with Ayurvedic super botanicals to nourish people and our planet. Equally important, we are supporting justice for the minority sugarcane farming community. And we’re doing it all using regenerative resources.
After training sessions, his father would wisely rush Arpit and his brother to the nearest street vendor for a refreshing glass of sugar cane juice. His coaches and doctors recommended sugarcane juice for natural hydration and sustained energy. Arpit went on to become an International Table-Tennis athlete, representing India, and yet to his dismay, when Arpit moved to New Orleans to study and play table tennis for Tulane, there was no sugarcane juice to be found.
Now, we know what you’re thinking. “Sugar water? Really?” But here’s the thing: like Bhoomi people have been pressing the juice from sugarcane for centuries—drinking it straight, or adding natural flavors like lime or ginger. You know how powerful wheatgrass is, right? Well, sugarcane is just another variety of grass. Our elixir contains electrolytes, vitamins, amino acids, and phytonutrients—so it hydrates more effectively than water alone. We named our venture “Bhoomi”, which means “Mother Earth” in Sanskrit, because we’re inspired by Ayurvedic wisdom, and re-engaging in a healthy, balanced, back-and-forth between our planet and its people. Join us in a cheers to your health, so we all can get better with Bhoomi.
While we share bhoomi with you, there is a more important story that needs to take precedence – The story of sugarcane. Some of you are aware while many are not. The story of sugarcane has a significant relevance in this world than what we hear about. The path of sugarcane to the west has been tumultuous and we need to talk about its history and impact on the communities of color.
The sugar trade was done on the back of slavery and oppression to fuel colonization which disenfranchised communities of color across the world like never before. Therefore, building a thriving sugarcane company would be meaningless if we do not address this issue and support communities of color and most importantly African American sugarcane farmers. As a matter of fact, there were approximately 60 black sugarcane farmers in Louisiana in 1983, but today, there are only four.