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


 

TREE OWNERS NEWS

July 1993

     Sherry and I just got back from another month in Paradise - and we want to bring you up to date.

Burma - Three Years of Teak Left

     We just received an Alert from the Rainforest Action Network about the massive logging of Burma's rainforests, especially its teak forests.

     The vast majority of teak consumed in the world today comes from the world's natural rainforests, such as the massive harvests being taken from Burma's once mighty teak forests.

     Burma's rainforests contain approximately 80% of the world's teak supply and are an easy source of hard currency for the Burmese military government. A century-old teak tree can bring as much as $25,000.

     Concerned scientists estimate that loggers are destroying nearly 2 million acres of Burma's rainforests each year.

     Neighboring Thailand, which banned logging within its own borders in 1989, recently resumed logging in the nearby Burmese teak forests.

     The Rainforest article predicts, "The resumption of Thai logging in Burma will accelerate the destruction of Burma's already ravaged tropical forests."

     But of much more critical importance, the report also predicts, "if logging continues at the present rate, Burma's teak forests will be completely logged out in less than three years."

     It is now even more urgent, and potentially more profitable, to plant teak and other endangered tropical hardwood trees for later harvest.

TEAK TREE PRICES GOING UP!!

The prices for Santo Domingo teak trees are going up Friday, August 6.

Please see Santo Domingo Teak for details!

Teak Wood Prices

     Despite the massive harvests of Burma's remaining teak forests, the price of teak continues to climb.

     To find out just how much, we called a tropical wood import broker. The wholesale import-export prices he quoted for teak today are an average of 52% above those he quoted less than two years ago.

     This is a price rise of more than 23% per year, nearly four times the rate of price increase in our teak projections.

     (Later this year we will study the rate of increase of the prices of our native species.)

One year old teak on Campo Real - click for full size image
One year old teak on Campo Real - June 1993

Campo Real

     It is the rainy season now in Costa Rica, and Campo Real is alive with activity. About sixty workers are busy pruning, cleaning, fertilizing, drilling, and planting.

     We plan to plant more than 45,000 trees of about 30 different species at Campo Real this planting season.

     Some of our workers are busy planting native species and others are planting the last flat areas with teak.

     Still other workers are cleaning and pruning the 1992 teak. And others are completing the cleaning of the rows of native species planted last year.

     During the dry season, the natives species need to be protected from the hot sun, and the grasses are allowed to grow tall around the trees. In the rainy season, when the sun is not as hot, the workers clean around the native trees to let the rain and light reach them.

     We did not measure the native trees on this trip, because the workers were still in the process of cleaning around them, but some of the cristobal trees, for example, were over six feet tall.

     The growth of the teak is amazing. The 1992 teak trees at Campo Real now average about fifteen feet in height, more than double our projections. Some are over twenty-five feet tall and three inches in diameter.

Planting teams at Santo Domingo - click for full size image
It was a joy to watch our planting teams on Santo Domingo

Santo Domingo

     When we arrived at Santo Domingo on the 7th of June, the flat fields had been transformed. The tall grass and weeds had been chopped, areas had been smoothed out, and the fence rows had been pruned.

     There was work going on all around in final preparations for this year's planting.

     As we pulled our Trooper into one of the two large fields, we saw a tractor with a flat trailer behind. Workers were loading rocks, old stumps and other debris onto the trailer to be hauled out of the field so we can later mow between the rows of trees. A small bulldozer had just cut a drainage ditch and was smoothing the area.

     In the distance, a backhoe was dislodging some larger rocks and loading them into a waiting dump truck.

     Another tractor was moving in large overlapping passes, thoroughly disking the field, turning the vegetation under to add organic material to the soil and loosening the earth for the planting.

     In the weeks before, workers had prepared thousands of stakes to mark the planting lines, and our engineer had laid out base lines, five hundred meters long and ninety nine meters apart.

     Now workers were carefully placing the stakes three meters apart in arrow-straight lines that stretched as far as you could see.

     That afternoon Sherry and I planted the first tree, as we had done the year before at Campo Real. The planting began.

     Two teams of five workers each worked with ropes longer than a football field, each marked with tape every three meters. Row after row, the workers pulled the ropes tight and straight between the base lines, and marked the spot for each tree, exactly three meters apart, in rows three meters apart.

     Some of the workers made holes while others walked the line, placing a teak stalk by each hole. Then all five team members hand planted the teak stalks in the holes.

     An older forestry worker with years of tree-planting experience was now overseeing the marking, and controlling the quality of the planting.

     At first the workers seemed unsure, not moving as a team, feeling their way. They knew what to do, but the work just didn't flow.

     It was all familiar and comfortable for us. Sherry and I had seen the same thing with the workers at Campo Real as they began their first planting the year before. We knew these workers too would soon hit their stride.

     We visited Santo Domingo every other day for the month of June, alternating with Campo Real. Each time we returned, more work had been done and the planting teams gained precision.

     By the third week, the machinery had moved to the other field, and the planting teams were really singing - literally.

     It was such a joy to see them move, each worker knowing exactly what to do and moving in synchrony with his teammates.

     Two workers pulled the rope tight while two others quickly made holes at the spots marked on the rope. The fifth teammate literally ran down the row, distributing the teak stalks.

     Then in two's, they planted - one at each of two adjacent holes, each one leapfrogging past the other as he finished planting a tree - all the while singing and shouting as they competed for the most rows planted.

     Late in the afternoon, as the older forestry worker and the farm manager walked the rows and reviewed the day's planting, they found little to be redone, and a lot to be proud of.

     When we visited Santo Domingo for the last time on July 3rd, we drove slowly down the road in the center of each of the fields, and looked at row after row of little teak trees beginning to sprout their first leaves. Thousands of trees had been neatly planted where none had stood just four weeks before.

Preparing for the planting - click for full size image
Disking the soil to prepare for planting at Santo Domingo

Santo Domingo Teak

     Judging by the wonderful soil in the flat areas of Santo Domingo, and the size of the several teak trees already growing on the farm, we can expect excellent growth at Santo Domingo.

     Sherry and I have decided to work a little ahead of our orders and plant all of the flat area of Santo Domingo this year. By the end of July or the first week in August, all of the Santo Domingo teak will be planted.

     To be fair to everyone, on August 6 the price of teak trees will go up, because by that date all of the teak trees will be in the ground and growing. If you would like to take advantage of the pre-planting price, your order must be in by August 6.

     As we are writing this, we have Santo Domingo teak trees available but we can't promise for how long. After reading about the teak forests in Burma and confirming the dramatic rise in wholesale teak prices, Sherry and I have increased the number of Santo Domingo teak trees we are retaining for our own account.

     Please call soon if you want to order trees, or if you have any questions at all.

Sherry with large teak tree - click for higher quality image
Sherry standing next to a teak tree
 planted years ago on Santo Domingo

More on "Smart Wood"

     We wrote in the last newsletter that the Rainforest Alliance is considering granting us certification as one the few Smart Wood sources in the world. Richard Donovan, the director of the Smart Wood Certification program, visited both Campo Real and Santo Domingo in May, and made a preliminary evaluation.

     After visiting our farms, Richard wrote that our program of planting teak on the flat areas of the farms and native species on the hillsides is appropriate for "silvicultural, ecological, and economic reasons."

     He said that we have a good selection of native species that includes important endangered and threatened species, and he found the work that was going on at Santo Domingo "very impressive."

     Richard wrote that, pending a more detailed follow-up evaluation by an independent forester, "I believe that the TATF reforestation project will qualify for Smart Wood Certification as a well managed plantation. Such a certification would mean that the project is using forestry practices and a management philosophy that are in keeping with Smart Wood guidelines. We would certify that TATF is planting what it says it is, that the reforestation activities are well planned and implemented, and that the reforestation is following both Smart Wood guidelines and, to the extent we can evaluate it, Costa Rican law in terms of reforestation practices."

     Although we are not yet certified, it certainly feels good to hear from someone with Richard's experience that we are doing things the right way.

Sherry and Steve receive the Good Steward Award - click for full size image
Sherry and Steve receiving the National Arbor Day Foundation's
1993 Good Steward Award

National Arbor Day Award

     Our May weekend in Nebraska City to receive the National Arbor Day Foundation's 1993 Good Steward award was a truly rewarding experience. They made us feel like heroes.

     We met a number of wonderful and committed people, ranging from the Governor of Nebraska, to an eleven year old boy from Park City, Utah, who had been chosen for a poster he made about saving trees. The whole weekend was a wonderful experience.

Articles

     We thought you might enjoy seeing some recent articles about Tropical American Tree Farms. We've included a copy of an article from the May 4 Columbus Dispatch and another from the June issue of World of Wood, the Journal of the International Wood Collectors Society.

Friends and Neighbors

     Please continue to share all of this news with others you think might enjoy being involved in our project. More than ever, we want to plant as many tropical trees as possible. And more than ever, we believe this is a uniquely profitable opportunity.

Thank You!

     Sherry and I again thank all of you for your continued confidence and support. Without you, much of what we are doing, much of what we've written about in this newsletter, would not be possible. We want you to be proud to be an important part of this unique and worthwhile project.



 


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.