Tropical American Tree Farms - growing precious tropical hardwoods for you! - click to return to the home page

  

Our Personal Testimony
_____________
Our Commitment
What’s New
Investing in Tropical Hardwood Trees
Projections
Please send
 more information


How to Order
Photo Gallery
Tree Owners
Notes and Letters
from Tree Owners
Articles about Tropical American Tree Farms
Tree Owners News
Why Plant Tropical
Hardwood Trees
Tropical Rainforests
Tropical American
Tree Farms
Conservation
Costa Rica
We Will Grow Tropical
Hardwoods for You!
Tropical Hardwoods
Visit the Farms
Our Guarantees
Imagine!
Frequently Asked Questions
Search this Website
Contact Us


 

Globally Involved Americans Shed Provincial Stereotype

Below is the complete text of the article.

World of Wood, August 1997

by Jim Carrier

     From time to time I've thought of Denver, Colorado as provincial - isolated from and unconcerned with, changes that lap at distant shores. To act locally and ignore the rest sums up the attitude.

     But four Coloradans recently crossed my path who rewrite an old cliché.  After traveling abroad they began working on problems the rest of us only read about.  On any given day you'll find them both thinking and acting globally.

     . . .  financial adviser Virginia Moran came to my attention after a column on cutting exotic woods in rain forests.  Her solution was to invest in a teak tree farm.

     A long love affair with Costa Rica led her to Tropical American Tree Farms, a 4,700-acre venture on the Pacific coast.  The area had been clear-cut of native wood.  But founders Sherry and Steve Brunner (IWCS #5545) learned that teak and other trees could be grown there. 

     Here's how it works.  You invest in 100 trees at a cost of $21-$30 per tree.  After eight years the eight-inch-thick trees are thinned.   The harvest pays back the investment.  Then your crop is harvested about every four years.  After 25 years the last of your trees will be cut.

     The demand for teak's beauty and water-shedding is growing, but as a crop "it doesn't take 500 years to grow like redwood," said Moran, who concentrates on socially screened investments.  

     "It's win-win.  I'd like to do something for Costa Rica. It provides (90-120) jobs.  It's wonderful for the environment.  Teak leaves put out a lot of oxygen.  I can make a tax-deductible trip to see my investment.  And, there is a little bed and breakfast, open-air restaurant and other facilities.

     "The return is so phenomenal I hate to mention it for fear of scaring people away.  It's probably 200 percent over time.   It's not a licensed security.  I simply tell people about it.  The biggest risk is the first year or two.  I intend to buy more.  It's the niftiest investment that I have ever found."

     Copyright 1997, Empire magazine, Denver, Colo.  Reprinted with permission.  For information contact Steve & Sherry Brunner, Tropical American Tree Farms, c/o AAA Express Mail (SJO), 1641 N.W. 79th Ave., Miami, FL  33126; USA telephone: (800) 788-4918, or 011-506-291-0713.     

 

 


Please call or e-mail us with any questions. "Tropical American Tree Farms", "growing precious tropical hardwoods for you!", TATF, and Supra Mixture are all exclusive trademarks of T.A.T.F., S.A..  Raleo® is a registered trademark of Raleo Design S.A.  All materials and content copyrighted 1991 - 2008.  All rights are reserved worldwide.