TREE OWNERS NEWS
Summer 2007
Thank You!
Sherry and I would like to
begin this newsletter by warmly thanking every one of you for your
wonderful enthusiasm and support. Your wonderful faith and support make
all that we do and write about possible. Thank you!
We apologize for the very long
time since our last Tree Owners News. Back when we began our very first
newsletter, now nearly 15 years ago, we wrote that we would write
additional newsletters “as events warrant and time permits”.
Well, many events since our
last newsletter have warranted writing about, but as you will see from
the wonderful news below, we have been fully dedicated to growing both
Tropical American Tree Farms and Raleo and have not had the time for
many months to sit down and write a new newsletter.
So here is our long delayed
update on all that we are doing on the farms, in the office, and at
Raleo. Our goal from now on is to write more frequent, brief updates.
Overview
- We have now planted more than 2 million
tropical hardwood trees of 51 different beautiful species
- The trees we have planted to date will
produce an estimated 150 to 200 million board feet of tropical
hardwood lumber over the next 25 years – all tropical hardwoods that
will not have been taken from the natural rainforest
- Our plantations now consist of 15 farms and
nearly 14,000 acres
- We are growing beautiful tropical hardwood
trees for more than 3,000 companies, trusts, individuals and
foundations
- Our thinning harvests to date have produced
nearly 4 million board feet of young tropical hardwoods
- We have greatly increased and improved our
professional management teams for Tropical American Tree Farms and Raleo
- Together with our foresters we have developed
a new Supra Mixture of our five fastest growing species of tropical
hardwoods
- Our professional forestry engineers have made
it possible to now also offer Cuban Mahogany trees, one of the most
expensive woods in the world
- Our farms management team have begun the
process of streamlining and mechanizing our lumber extraction and
processing from our thinnings
- We have expanded Raleo from its former 10,000
square foot location into a 40,000 square foot production facility
where we have also been able to increase management efficiency by
moving both our Tropical American Tree Farms and Raleo offices into
the same facility
- We have established a core team, headed up by
my younger son Jake, dedicated exclusively to developing high volume
applications and markets for the young lumber from our early
thinnings
- Raleo’s exquisite furnishings and
architectural details crafted from the beautiful young hardwoods
from our Tropical American Tree Farms plantations are now
represented in Raleo’s own design showroom in DCOTA, the largest
design center in the world, and in independent design showrooms and
by professional representatives in New York, Toronto, Chicago,
Moscow, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas. Other
showrooms and representation in additional major design markets will
soon follow
- Among more than 1,000 international design
and product exhibitors at the 2005 annual Hospitality Design show in
Las Vegas, Raleo’s architectural details won the Best of Competition
design award - the best of the best

Raleo's HD Best of Competition
- From Raleo’s utilization of the young
hardwoods from the first thinnings, we have now distributed more
than $750,000 to tree owners for the lumber from their first
thinnings – an amount which will increase rapidly as we continue to
develop our marketing and utilization of the young lumber and
products from the early thinnings, and even more so as our trees
approach the age at which the thinned lumber can go directly into
the international market. Some of our tree owners have already
received more in distributions than they paid for their trees, and
as with all of our thinnings, their best trees are still in the
field continuing to grow
- Our tree prices will go up July 20th. Out of
courtesy to you, our tree owners, we have been delaying the increase
until first completing and sending this newsletter
One of the finest and most
expensive woods in the world is Cuban Mahogany, often referred to as the
“wood of kings”. For centuries Cuban Mahogany was the premier cabinet
wood in the world, sought after by the royalty of Europe and favored by
world renowned furniture makers of the day such as Chippendale,
Hepplewhite and Duncan Phyfe.
Because of its great beauty and
wonderful working properties, Cuban Mahogany was harvested nearly out of
existence by the beginning of the 20th century and to commercial
extinction by the 1940’s.
Much more beautiful and 50%
more dense than the common Honduran Mahogany, Cuban Mahogany wood today
can be found only in limited quantities and is by far one of the most
expensive of the tropical hardwoods, selling at retail for prices
ranging from $20 to $75 per board foot, and sometimes even sold by the
pound. Teak by comparison, also a precious wood, retails for $12 to $20
per board foot.
Over our many years of
attending and participating in woodworking shows, Sherry and I have been
asked many, many times if there is any way we can find a source and
plant Cuban Mahogany, both for the great potential profit and to help
preserve the species from complete extinction.
When Hans hired Pablo Chacon
(more below), a professional forestry engineer whose area of
specialization is in establishing tree nurseries and tree genetics, one
of our first requests to Hans and Pablo was to please do all possible to
find a quality source of the extremely scarce and very valuable Cuban
Mahogany.
After a diligent search, Pablo
was successful in locating some high quality Cuban Mahogany seeds and we
are very proud to announce that we now have a limited quantity of Cuban
Mahogany seedlings in our Tropical American Tree Farms nurseries, ready
to field plant as soon as this year's planting season begins in the next
few weeks.
Cuban Mahogany, Swietenia
mahagoni, also known as West Indies Mahogany and Antilles Mahogany,
grows very well, with a growth rate much greater than Purpleheart and
Cocobolo for example, but not quite as fast as Teak and the fast-growing
species in our Supra Mixture.
We plan to follow a 25 year
rotation and to allow the Cuban Mahogany to grow a bit longer between
thinnings than Teak because Cuban Mahogany is more shade-tolerant than
Teak, shade tolerance being one of the major reasons that thinnings are
necessary.
We have not developed any
projections for Cuban Mahogany but one reason we are so excited about it
is even if it were to grow at only half the volume rate of Teak, because
Cuban Mahogany is so much more valuable than Teak, the return is likely
to be very attractive.

Cuban Mahogany
Cuban Mahogany trees are very
hardy. All mahoganies (actually all members of the Meliaceae family)
are often visited by a little shoot-tip borer moth that sometimes lays
its eggs on the growing tips. When the eggs hatch, the little larvae
bore into the growing tip and the tree then throws out new shoots. We
have learned from our many years of experience of growing Mahogany to
simply prune off any affected tips. Once the trees pass about 18 months
of age, the moths seem to no longer be attracted to the trees.
An alternative that we are too
conservative to pursue would be to not prune off the affected tips and
allow the trees to grow with many branchings or bifurcations because the
varied grain patterns of the crotch wood at the points of bifurcation is
even more valuable.
Cuban Mahogany is a tight
grained wood with a rich, reddish to yellow brown color that darkens
with exposure. It has beautiful, highly figured crotch grain and
quartersawn and rift cut planks reveal an incredible figured ribbon
stripe design. Its luster is high, silky, and golden.
In addition to its incredible
beauty, Cuban Mahogany is renowned for its durability when exposed to
the elements. It is comparable in strength to red oak, carves
beautifully, and machines extremely well. It has a high natural luster
and is easy to finish. The wood dries without warping and checking and
can be worked easily with both hand and power tools. It also makes
excellent veneer, glues and bends well, and is a superior wood for
turnery.
Cuban Mahogany is also one of
the most dimensionally stable woods in the world and has a bending
strength comparable to Teak. Almost every desirable quality for a
cabinet wood is applicable to Cuban Mahogany. No other wood in the
world combines all these features.
Because of Cuban Mahogany's
great scarcity, in addition to the trees that we will be field-planting
for later harvest, we will also plant several thousand Cuban Mahogany
trees in the protection areas throughout our farms, trees that will
never be harvested.
To continue with our tradition
of having always offered a discount to celebrate making a new species
available, from now until August 15, you are welcome to deduct a 15%
discount from our pre-planting tree prices.
We are very proud to offer to
grow Cuban Mahogany for discerning tree owners. If you would like us to
grow Cuban Mahogany for you, it would be good to order your trees as
soon as you read this because their quantity is quite limited.

Luis Ricardo and Raleo craftsmen
going over design details
New Management Team
Building a perpetuating
management team for both Tropical American Tree Farms and Raleo has been
our concerted focus over the last two years.
Sherry and I had long planned
to expand and improve our organization and our management teams, both in
the office and on the farms, to allow Tropical American Tree Farms and
Raleo to continue to prosper and grow without being dependent upon us.
Our plans were to focus on that objective in 2008 and 2009, after Raleo
was firmly up and really running.
Unfortunately two years ago we
had the sad experience of learning that a manager had been being less
than honest. We would have discovered his activity in our annual
certified audits, but honest employees came forward and reported his
actions much earlier.
Those of you who have been with us a while know
that our abiding philosophy is that every inconvenience brings with it
the seed of an equal or greater blessing.
After learning of our manager’s
perfidy and ending his employment two years ago, Sherry and I
immediately accelerated our management-building schedule by several
years and began a thorough, top to bottom review of every aspect of the
company. For the last two years we have focused intently on
strengthening our internal checks and balances and recruiting wonderful
new management professionals for both San José and the farms.
The blessing is that we now
have in place a wonderful, professional team that will allow our company
and all of our work to carry strongly forward indefinitely.
In San José, we have the
blessing of working with Luis Ricardo Rodriguez, our dynamic and
professional general manager of both the Tropical American Tree Farms
business and Raleo. Luis Ricardo joined us in January of 2006 to head
up marketing, but the value of his prior professional experience in
strategic planning became quickly evident, and in January of this year
we promoted Luis Ricardo to General Manager with responsibility and
authority over all of Raleo’s activities and Tropical American Tree
Farms business.
We promoted Eduardo Moreira,
who had been the head of our accounting department for five years, to
controller to oversee and protect all of the activities and assets of
both companies, and especially all of your trees and lumber.
Marjorie Perez, who before
joining us was the head of the finance department for a large
transportation company here in Costa Rica, has joined us as our finance
and administrative manager.
Luis Ricardo, Eduardo and
Marjorie are now our administrative/executive committee and manage all
day to day operations in San José.
Also new members of our
administrative team are Harold Pacheco, our head of purchasing, Luis
Diego Cabrera, head of logistics, Anna Maria Jara, our human resources
manager, and Josephine Clausen Tropical
American Tree Farms’ coordinator who manages all of our
Tree Owner documentation.
Professionally managed
plantation operations require substantial specialized knowledge as well
as excellent managerial experience and organizational skills. Our
review on the farms confirmed what we had been seeing. Beto, our then
farms manager, had been falling further behind in the thinnings and his reporting data to
the office and he was not comfortable delegating. By mutual agreement
Beto retired early last year and Sherry and I set out to recruit the
very best plantation management team possible.

Hans, Steve and Josué
We have been very blessed that
Hans Tanner joined us in March of last year and now manages all of our
farms and plantation operations. Hans is an excellent forestry engineer
and a very experienced plantation manager, trained in top Swiss forestry
schools, with eight years of forestry experience in Europe followed by
17 years experience in managing tropical forestry and plantation
operations in Latin America.
A precious area of Hans’
expertise is in lumber extraction and in the directional felling of the
trees, which is critically important in plantations. Hans has published
several articles on both forestry investing and on directional felling
techniques.
Hans has built his core farms
management team to include excellent Costa Rican forestry engineers,
Josué Brenes, whose specialty is plantation management, maintenance and
tree care, and Pablo Chacon, whose expertise is in nursery development,
plantation establishment, and tree genetics. Pablo too has published
articles on tree genetics and cloning.
Together this wonderful trio of
forestry professionals is now managing the farms and our existing
plantings, conducting the thinnings and the extraction of the hardwoods
from the thinnings, and establishing additional nurseries and new
plantings.
Another special project they
have undertaken is developing GIS mapping of all of the farms and
plantation areas and reviewing all 2 million trees that we have planted,
both so they have accurate management data on a field by field basis and
to make sure that all are receiving the best of care.
Hans, Josué and Pablo are
supported by our San Isidro office team, lead by Andréa Picado.

Luis Bonilla and a Raleo craftsman
At Raleo, we are blessed to now
be working with Luis Bonilla, formerly the production manager at
Masonite’s San José door manufacturing facility where he oversaw 200
employees. As Raleo’s production manager, Luis has brought in Luis
Chaves, production foreman, Luis Alvarado, finishing manager, and Maria
Aleth Piedra Madrigal, manager of Raleo’s production design department.

Our San Jose Raleo team
Our Raleo showroom at DCOTA is
led by Mary Rosati our showroom manager, Leticia Dominguez our showroom
administrative manager, and Mario Moreno, in charge of outside
marketing. All three are very experienced in managing, administering
and marketing design showrooms and beautiful products. We are very
fortunate to be working with them.
Jake Brunner, my younger son
who designed most of Raleo’s beautiful and award winning furnishings and
architectural details, is now in charge of developing the markets and
uses for all of the young hardwoods coming from the thinnings. After
being our lead designer for four years, Jake has now expanded his
portfolio to include higher volume, value-added uses and markets for the
young hardwoods coming from the farms.

Steve, Hans and Rafa
We are also blessed to have an
exclusive consulting arrangement with José Rafael Serrano whose
expertise is in maximizing the yield of the lumber harvested and in the
conversion of lumber to finished products. Rafa received his PHD in
Purdue’s forestry school, one of the finest in the U.S., and has
published more than two dozen articles on forestry investment, lumber
production and processing from plantations, and wood products
production. Rafa’s focus is in refining our lumber processing to
further increase our efficiency and developing the high volume processes
for our new value-added lumber products. Jake, Rafa, Luis Bonilla and
Luis Ricardo are working as a team on expanding our lumber marketing and
utilization.
The wonderful people I have
described above, together with their respective teams comprise a bright
and energetic, forward-thinking administrative-management-leadership
team of 35 dedicated Tropical American Tree Farms and Raleo management professionals who oversee
Tropical American Tree Farms’ team of nearly 200 farm managers and
plantation employees on the farms and Raleo’s production team of 70
furniture makers, operators and technicians.
Tropical American Tree Farms
and Raleo together are now nearly 300 strong and growing.

Happy Tropical American Tree Farms workers
Sherry and I couldn’t be more
proud to present these wonderful, dedicated and delightful people to
you.
We are occasionally asked, “Why
Raleo?” “Why not just plant hardwood trees and sell the lumber.” If
only growing tropical hardwoods were that simple.
All during the 1980’s, before
starting Tropical American Tree Farms, initially only to grow tropical
hardwoods for our own account, we did a great deal of research on
tropical tree farming, both in Costa Rica and internationally.
From what we learned from our
research it appeared that our focus would be principally on
high-value species selection, quality planting requirements, the best
silvicultural techniques, and marketing the resulting lumber.
All of the planted trees must
be thinned out periodically as they grow, removing the smaller and least
desirable trees to make room for the more desirable trees to continue to
grow.
What was missing from the
information that we researched was discussion about the young tropical
hardwoods from the early thinnings.
The most significant single
fact that we have learned over these last 15 years on our Tropical
American Tree Farms plantations is that the young tropical hardwoods
from the early thinnings are very different from adult hardwoods from
more mature trees of the same species and are unknown in the
international market.
Adult tropical hardwoods from
the more mature trees of later thinnings and final harvests are well
known and, if they meet the norms of the market, are readily accepted
into the international market without further processing or production
beyond rough sawing and drying.
Young tropical hardwoods from
the early thinnings on the other hand are different in their
characteristics and color from the adult hardwoods, and are obviously
also much smaller in dimensions than the lumber from more mature trees.
Although the young tropical
hardwoods from the earliest thinnings are genuinely beautiful, and in
some cases more beautiful than the adult woods of the same species, the
young hardwoods from the earliest thinnings are essentially unknown in
the international market.
That is why the notes to
projections on our website include that “. . . young tropical hardwoods
are less known, or even unknown, in the world markets.”
Young Goncalo Alves wood for
example is almost completely white and very close grained, nearly like
ivory – just beautiful, but unknown on the market. Young Suradan is a
dusty rose color – absolutely beautiful, but unknown on the
international market.
Young Teak exhibits more
chatoyance and is more beautiful than adult Teak, but is essentially
unknown on the international market.
The age at which the wood
becomes adult varies from species to species. Teak for example begins
to exhibit adult characteristics at about 15 years of tree age. Some of
the lumber from our 13-14 year thinning of Teak may qualify to go
directly into the world market – selected heartwood from the first log
for example, the log closest to the stump, because the lowest log on the
tree has the fewest knots.
After the trees reach an age
that the hardwoods have the internationally recognized characteristics,
the lumber can be dried and sold directly into the market without any
additional processing required.
Prior to that age however,
unless the young lumber is put to a higher value use, it can be only
sold at a low price on the local market, if at all.
The difference in market value
is dramatic. Adult Teak brings $5.01 to $10.95 per board foot on the
wholesale international market (ITTO May 2007 Tropical Timber Market
Report). Young Teak, in comparison, currently sells on the local market
for about $0.65 per board foot (Note: adjusted October 2008, from $.95 because
of lower construction activity), up from $0.25 per board foot not too
many years ago.
Those of you who have been with
us for a while or who have read earlier issues of our Tree Owners News
know that that lack of a market for young tropical hardwoods is why we
started Raleo – to create high-value uses and markets for the young
tropical hardwoods from the earliest thinnings from our farms.

Steve measuring a veneer-quality teak
tree being allowed to grow to the final harvest
Quick History
A quick history: In late 1997
when we conducted some test cuttings of our earliest planted trees that
were then 5 years old, we learned that the very young wood was
substantially different from adult hardwoods and had essentially no
market value. We wrote about that lack of value in several earlier
issues of our Tree Owners News – January 1998 - first cull thinning will
not yield lumber, November 1998 - first thinning will be non-commercial,
Summer 1999 - the young lumber will have little or no commercial value,
and announcing that we were establishing Raleo for our tree owner’s
benefit, to create high value uses for the young wood, Fall 2000 - won’t
know value of the young lumber until Raleo develops uses and market.
Our first Raleo prototypes were
small items like cutting boards, turned paperweights and letter openers
– beautiful, but too small to utilize much of the wood that would come
from our early thinnings. We quickly concluded that we needed to
manufacture larger items like furniture to create value in the necessary
volume.
In 2001 and 2002 we intensely
studied the furnishings market, pricing, and channels and personally
visited most of the design centers throughout the United States. We
hired a not inexpensive market research firm out of New York to
independently research the market and report their conclusions as to
which market and channel to pursue, at what price points and with which
designs. We tested numerous designs and crafting techniques on
prototypes of larger furnishings, all from the youngest hardwoods from
our earliest thinnings.
By 2003 we wrote in our Tree
Owners News that “We have determined our desired Raleo product mix,
channels of distribution and market position, designed and refined
products, concluded testing innumerable finishes, abrasives and
adhesives, perfected our drying, cutting, shaping, assembly, veneering,
and finishing techniques, vetted our finished designs, and finalized our
first three collections of beautiful upscale Raleo accent tables, Pi,
Vária and Twist . . . all created from the beautiful hardwoods from our
earliest thinnings.”
In 2003 - 2004 we began
exhibiting Raleo’s furnishings in major international design shows and
actually marketing Raleo products.
We hope you will enjoy reading
below how far Raleo has come in the three short years since.

Luis Bonilla, Luis Ricardo and Steve
reviewing
recently milled teak from the farms
Today
In addition to furnishings and
architectural details, we are presently in the process of expanding
Raleo’s scope to include higher volume value-added products, both
finished for the design and construction markets, and semi-finished
components for other manufacturers – still all made from the young
tropical hardwoods from our earliest thinnings. Those higher volume
value-added products are the exclusive focus of the group mentioned
above in the overview that Jake is leading.
Over the last five years we
have invested prodigious amounts of time and several million dollars in
developing Raleo into a world-class company that has won top
international design awards, and as you will read below, is now
producing some of the very finest furnishings and architectural details
for the very top specifiers and clients in various parts of the world.
We have made that large
investment of time and resources both out of our commitment to you, our
tree owners, and because it just makes sense – to create high value uses
for the young lumber from the early thinnings and to demonstrate to the
world’s most discerning architects, designers and specifiers that
tropical hardwoods from Tropical American Tree Farms are the very
highest in quality and beauty available.
In summary, young hardwoods
from the early thinnings are at present essentially not accepted on the
international market. They are genuinely beautiful, but that beauty is
not yet reflected in the market. As a result of our extensive
investment of time and capital in developing Raleo, its products and its
market, Raleo can support paying the prices per board foot mentioned above,
which are several times greater than the low prices that the
market presently offers.
Perfect Fit
Tropical American Tree Farms
and Raleo fit together perfectly, and yet the relationship is completely
voluntary. As we wrote in our last Tree Owners News, no tree owner is
obligated to sell their wood to Raleo, nor to wait for Raleo to utilize
your wood. The lumber from your trees is yours alone and we will do
with it exactly as you direct.
For those of you who wish us to
sell your wood, we commit to you always that any lumber from any
thinning or harvest that can bring more on either the local or
international market than the price that Raleo can support paying, your
wood will go directly into that market and not to Raleo.

Raleo teak Ribbon columns in
Boca Raton Magazine feature article
We know of no other tropical
forestry operation in the world that is completely vertically
integrated, all the way from producing seedlings in our own nurseries,
planting the trees and raising the tropical hardwoods, felling, milling,
processing and drying the hardwoods, manufacturing high-end consumer and
contract furnishings and architectural details from the young hardwoods
from the earliest thinnings, participating in international design shows
and winning prestigious design awards, having our Raleo design showroom
in a prime international design center and Raleo’s products represented
by independent design showrooms and representatives internationally, and
on certain orders even performing the product installations on the
jobsite with our own Raleo installation crew from Costa Rica – while at
the same time demonstrating to top architects and designers around the
world the great beauty and high value of our Tropical American Tree
Farms tropical hardwoods.
We want every tree owner to be
very proud to be part of this world class endeavor.
Raleo Update
As an indication of just how
far Raleo has progressed in the last three years, Raleo’s exquisite
furnishings and architectural details, crafted from the beautiful young
Tropical American Tree Farms hardwoods, are now represented in Raleo’s
own design showroom in DCOTA and in independent showrooms and
representatives in New York, Toronto, Chicago, Moscow, San Francisco,
Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas. Others in Atlanta, Dallas and
additional major markets will soon follow.

Raleo DCOTA showroom
Raleo's beautiful products are
now in luxury homes, condominiums, yachts, and commercial and
hospitality installations throughout the world, ranging from a luxury
hotel in Miami, a Trump facility in Atlantic City, two 160+ foot $25
million luxury yachts, one just completed in the U.S. and now on its way
to the Mediterranean and the other about to be launched in Italy, an
elegant home in Turkey, an upscale hotel in Washington D.C., Saks in
Beverly Hills, MTV offices, a luxury hotel in Aruba, a major publisher's
headquarters in New York City, a wonderful home in Antigua, luxury
condominiums in Boca Raton, an exquisite home in London, and soon as
focal décor in the lobbies of the Hard Rock Hotel in Tampa, the Disney
Contemporary Hotel at Disney World in Orlando, the La Concha Hotel in
Puerto Rico, the MGM Grand in Detroit, an upstate New York casino, and an exquisite Teak wine
cellar in a 20,000 square foot home in California, and other upscale
properties and projects around the world.

Raleo teak Wave credenza
To give you an idea of the
extent to which designers and architects and their clients are willing
to go to include Raleo’s beautiful products in their design, on several
of our recent orders, they have shipped major structural components from
jobsites as far away as Italy and England to our Raleo facilities in
Costa Rica for us to craft and integrate our Raleo products and then
ship the completed item back to the distant jobsite.
Our most recent Raleo news just
came in from Raleo’s Los Angeles showroom that Dr. Phil and his wife
Robin’s personal designer just bought one of Raleo's architectural
features, crafted from young Tropical American Tree Farms hardwoods, to
be displayed in Dr. Phil and Robin’s dining room in their new 14,000
square foot home in Beverly Hills.
The demand for Raleo’s
exquisite furnishings and architectural features crafted from our young
Tropical American Tree Farms hardwoods from the earliest thinnings has
continued to grow rapidly. To increase Raleo’s production capacity, we
have moved Raleo from its former 10,000 square foot facility into a
40,000 square foot production facility and are continuing to add
personnel and equipment.
And as I mentioned above, we
will soon begin production of much higher volume value added products,
again all crafted from the young tropical hardwoods from our tree farms.
Because we began producing and
marketing Raleo’s beautiful products twelve years after we started our
tree farms, for our early tree owners who have opted to wait for Raleo
to utilize their young wood to enjoy the much higher value that Raleo
can support paying (nearly everyone), there has been a significant time
lag between the thinning of your trees and Raleo’s utilization of your
wood and your resulting higher distribution. We very much appreciate
your patience!
Distributions
We are pleased that Raleo’s
utilization and the resulting distributions from that utilization have
now reached more than $750,000 and that some of your distributions from
your first thinnings are more than the original price of your trees.
Still, we are dedicated to continue Raleo’s rapid growth to the point
where Raleo is utilizing the young wood as quickly as it comes from the
farms and the delay after future thinnings and processing is essentially
down to zero.
For new and prospective tree
owners, our notes to projections on our website say with respect to
distributions that “An additional year or more may be required for the
earliest thinnings” because young tropical hardwoods are unknown in the
world markets.
For our most recent plantings
our assessment is that that note won’t be necessary because Raleo will
likely reach the point where it is utilizing the young lumber as fast as
or faster than it comes from the farm well before the trees now being
planted reach the age of their first thinning.
Eliminating that year in our
projection notes can’t yet be a firm promise, but taking into account
the commitments that we have made in time and capital, the dedication
and professionalism of the men and women at Raleo, and the fact that
Raleo has grown from zero to world-class in a very short time, I believe
it is easily apparent why we make that prediction.
We will continue to keep you
updated on Raleo’s wonderful growth.
On the Farms
Hans and his teams are hard at
work on this year’s thinnings, performing the thinnings for which we
have sent the pre-thinning reports and assembling the pre-thinning data
for the thinnings we have not yet reported. Those pre-thinning reports
will be going out shortly.
They are working on the 1992,
1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1999 Teak right now – original plantings
totaling 370,000 trees. For each thinning they review all of the trees
and mark every single tree to be thinned. It is an amazingly
time-consuming process as they go through every field and evaluate all
of the trees to determine their degree of competition, as well as which
trees are likely to later produce the greatest quantity of high-quality
lumber, and which trees should be eliminated to allow the superior trees
to continue their growth.
They determine the desired
remaining percentage using a number of evaluations, including the rate
of growth, the crown closure, and the basal area per hectare. In each
thin they mark the smallest and least desirable trees to be removed and
leave the largest and best to remain for later harvest.

Thinning and milling in progress
Once they complete the above
process, Hans will review every tree to confirm their evaluations. And
then our field team counts every tree marked to be thinned and every
tree remaining, for every individual tree owner and group of trees. Our
office then prepares the pre-thinning reports and sends them out to each
individual owner.
Once thinned, our field teams
measure the quantity of wood from each group of trees and from that, our
office prepares and sends your post thinning report.
Their field work this year is
being a little hampered by early rains, but they will persist.
Hans has also updated our
thinning methods and has bought two skidders and three logging winches
to move our logs more efficiently, milling in cant in the field and then
later into lumber at fixed milling stations.
To increase our throughput, he
will also soon be buying a larger stationary bandmill to supplement the
11 portable bandmills we already have.
The GIS, or geographic
information system, mapping that Hans and his team are undertaking is
also a very large endeavor. When completed, they will have mapped every
field that we have planted, or will be planting, and all related
geographic features such as streams, natural forest and other protection
areas, and access roads, all mapped with GPS coordinates. Each of our
forestry engineers works in the field with laptops, so all fields,
sizes, roads, streams and protection areas and related data are always
available both in the field and in the office. All can then correctly
be managed and protected by any member of the farms management team or any
new manager that he or we may hire, and not be dependent upon any one
engineer’s or farm manager’s memory, personal knowledge or paper notes.
It is all part of our larger
objective of having both companies professionally managed and completely
capable of moving forward without depending upon any one person.
Hans and his team also have a
large planting agenda for this year which includes planting more than
200,000 trees. Our plantings this year will be focusing primarily on
Cuban Mahogany, Teak, our Supra Mixture, Cocobolo, and our Premium
Mixture.
We are very thankful to have
our farms in the hands of Hans and his very capable team.
Secondary Tree Market
Back when we started growing
trees by contract for tree owners in addition to the trees we grow for
our own account, because in anyone’s life circumstances change, we
anticipated that a secondary market for older trees would likely
eventually develop. We are now growing trees for more than 3,000
companies, trusts and individuals and in the last 15 years some tree
owner’s circumstances have indeed changed but in nearly every one of the
circumstances, the decision has been to not part with the trees,
undoubtedly partially because of the trees’ large anticipated future
value.
Still, from time to time we are
contacted by a tree owner who is interested in selling his or her trees
and we therefore want to communicate to all of you that if you would
like to have the opportunity to buy a prior owner’s trees, please either
send us a letter or e-mail us with your interest in terms of the
species, age and price range you would consider paying and when we know
of trees being available, we will attempt to make a match.
If we do make a match, to
preserve everyone’s privacy and also to make it clear that we, and not
the selling tree owner, have the responsibility to continue to maintain
the trees, we would manage the paperwork so that the selling tree owner
transfers the trees back to us and we in turn to the new owner.
As a tree owner, you are also
always welcome at any time to sell or convey your trees to anyone you
choose, whether to an individual within or outside of your family, or to
any entity such as a university or church, or to a trust or other entity
for your financial planning. We will be happy to assist in preparing
the assignment paperwork to properly transfer title to the new owner.
E-mail Address and Mailing Address
For all tree owners, please
always make sure that our office has your current e-mail address and
mailing address, and please update us of any change. We like to
communicate by e-mail whenever possible but will still need your mailing
address to mail distributions.
If you are not a tree owner but would
like to be kept abreast of developments on the farms, please be sure
that we have your latest e-mail address.
Excerpts on Investing in Trees
We thought you might enjoy the
following excerpts from articles in MoneyWeek and The
Economist published since our last newsletter.
The Economist, in an
article published February 5, 2007 titled “Timber as a growing asset
class” said:
- "Average annual returns on timber . . . have
outstripped those from leading global stock indices, property, oil
and gold for the past decade."
- ". . . modern investors are putting money
into trees to reap benefits in the nearer term."
- "A growing number of individuals, endowments
and pension funds are including timber as a 'hard asset' in their
portfolios."
- "As 'green' awareness rises around the world,
timber looks more attractive than ever."
MoneyWeek, in a July 7,
2006 article titled “Timber investors are barking up the right tree”
said:
- “The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
predicts world consumption of industrial wood will rise 60% over the
next 25 years"
- "trees have never heard of the Nasdaq bubble…
and they don’t know what a War on Terror is"
- ". . . over the past century the price of
wood has averaged an annual increase of 6%"
- “. . . the forestry sector is winning fresh
converts among investors.”
Prices Going Up!
We have held our tree prices
steady since March of last year. Because of increased costs we had
intended to raise our prices several months ago but out of courtesy to
all of you who already own trees we have continued to hold the prices
until completing this newsletter. Our new tree prices for all of our
species will go into effect on July 20.
Thank You Again!
Sherry and I would like to once
again thank every one of you very much for your continued enthusiasm,
trust and support and for making all of this possible!

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