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Fine WoodWorking -
June 2001
www.tropicalhardwoods.com
Feeling guilty about using
tropical hardwoods for your furniture making? Here is a way to assuage
those feelings and, hopefully, turn a profit at the same time.
Since 1991, Tropical American
Tree Farms in Costa Rica has planted more than one million hardwood
trees from 45 different species, with the help of outside investors.
Trees destined for harvest are grown on land that was previously farmed.
Areas subject to erosion, such as steep slopes and watershed land, are
planted to be forest in perpetuity.
The trees experience a
remarkable rate of growth. At the IWF show last year, the company
displayed a section of a 7-year-old teak tree already nearly a foot in
diameter. Although the growth rings were widely spaced, the heartwood
was already assuming the dark color so prized by furniture makers.
The web site contains financial
projections of owning trees that compare favorably with the past
performance of other investments. The minimum investment is about
$3,000, and tree owners receive regular updates on their investment’s
growth. I am looking forward to spending my retirement on a garden bench
made with my own teak.
-Mark Schofield, assistant editor
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