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Thinnings
As we wrote in our last Tree Owners News, the principal reason that we
asked Beto to retire is that he had gotten behind in thinnings and reporting.
Hans and his team have worked
diligently to catch up on both, but have
had challenges with the weather.
To provide a bit of background, we plant all of our species at an initial
spacing or distance between the trees based upon the growth characteristics
for that species so that the young trees compete for sunlight and grow tall
and straight. Then, as the crowns of the trees close and the competition
between trees increases, in periodic thinnings we remove the smallest and
least desirable trees to reduce the stand density and allow the remaining
superior trees to grow and increase in diameter.
  
One of our thinning teams
For our seed-grown teak, we have used as our guidelines thinnings after
the trees have completed 7, 10, 13, 17, and 21 full years of growth. Those ages are guidelines and all thinnings are always subject to our foresters’
review and recommendations. 2007 was extra rainy in the area of our
farms and because the soil was saturated, Hans’ recommendation to protect
the roots of the trees was to not put equipment into the fields and therefore
to delay the thinnings, with the intention of catching up in 2008. Once 2008 turned out to be particularly rainy
also, the decision was to still
keep the equipment out of the fields. To continue with the thinnings,
Hans bought several teams of oxen to extract the logs from the fields.
Working with the oxen is much safer for the roots of the trees, but
is also much more time consuming.
  
Oxen at work in the field
For some thinnings, to help move the process
forward, we will combine selected thinnings.
Our foresters will do a final evaluation
of each stand of trees just before the thinning to determine the final number of trees to be removed and
will send that information to the office.
As soon as the information arrives from the farms,
our office will prepare and send pre-thinning reports to everyone whose trees are about
to be thinned.
We hope to be all caught up by the end of this
year.
Raleo
As I am sure most of you know, we started Raleo both to create value
for the young lumber coming from the earliest thinnings and to demonstrate
to high-end designers the great beauty of our young Tropical American Tree
Farms tropical hardwoods.
Raleo has been very successful in the second objective, with Raleo’s
exquisite furnishings and architectural details in many of the finest homes,
offices and hotels in the world. Raleo Surfaces for example accent
the elevator lobbies for all 27 floors of a very upscale hotel. We are right
now crafting Raleo Surfaces panels for a famous movie and television star
for her vacation home in Utah, and more Surfaces for her mother’s home there
also.
Our Raleo Surfaces have also for example been specified for the new Tiger
Woods Hotel in Dubai, which has been suspended until the economy rebounds.
As you might expect, Raleo’s growth, which is primarily in the luxury
market, has slowed for now and its lumber utilization and distributions
from the lumber have slowed to a trickle.
In analyzing Raleo, we have concluded that it is indeed a wonderful emissary
for our beautiful tropical hardwoods in the high end designer/architect
market, but that we need to change our focus in order to be able to create
value for the volume of young tropical hardwoods coming from the farms.
Raleo itself will focus less on custom products, both because each custom
order requires an extensive investment of both administrative and production
time, and the quantity of wood utilized in many of the custom orders represents
a small percentage of the overall product or project price.
We will continue Raleo but both because of the slowed growth for the
time being and the lower utilization of the young wood, we no longer include
Raleo in our projections (more below).

Raleo Surfaces panels on yacht stair
barrel
Value-Adding for the Young Tropical Hardwoods
Another reason that this is a very exciting time is that we are changing
the focus of our entire company solely to producing the greatest volume
of the highest quality lumber possible from the trees we have planted and
to converting that lumber to cash for you, our tree owners, by selling the
more mature tropical hardwoods from the later thinnings of older trees directly
into the market and producing and marketing the value-added products from
the younger wood from the earlier thinnings.
We have done a thorough analysis of alternative uses for the young tropical
hardwoods from the early thinnings in both the local market here in Costa
Rica and the international market and have identified eight new product
areas that are less high-end than our present Raleo products and therefore
much more affordable and lend themselves to volume production and sales. We will be initiating production of two of those product areas within the
next 30 days.
After these first two higher-volume value-added product areas are established,
we will initiate production and marketing of more of the eight we have selected. Some of the higher-volume value-added products will be marketed under the
Raleo name, as a value alternative to Raleo’s higher end products, and others
will be marketed outside Raleo.
We anticipate significant marketing and production volumes, young lumber
utilization and distributions from all of these higher-volume products.
In each case, the value adding will create a greater value for the young
lumber than the values we show in the
projections.
Thank You!
We also want to publicly thank two tree owners who are also very astute
and very dedicated retired business executives and have helped immeasurably
in scouring and evaluating the world’s wood and wood products markets. Their
research and help has been invaluable in our determining the value-added
product mix that we will now begin to pursue to utilize the stock of young
lumber from the farms as well as the upcoming increasing harvests.
Last Public Planting
To allow our whole team to focus exclusively on producing quantity and
quality lumber from the trees we have planted and on marketing the lumber
and value added products, we have determined that this year, 2009, will
be our last public planting for the foreseeable future. It is a painful
decision but one that allows us to best fulfill our responsibilities to
all of you.
Tropical American Hardwoods
We have added a new arm of our company, called Tropical American Hardwoods,
whose function will be exclusively to market the adult lumber coming from
the farms and define, produce and market higher-volume value-added products
from the younger tropical hardwoods coming from the farms.
  
Order of 13 year teak cut to
specifications being prepared to ship
Tropical American Hardwoods has initiated two websites,
http://tropicalamericanhardwoods.com and
http://ecohardwoods.com, to market the lumber. You will soon be hearing
much more about Tropical American Hardwoods.
Preparing for Higher Volume
Our estimates are that the 2+ million tropical hardwood trees that we
have planted on our farms will over the next 20 years produce between 150
million and 200 million board feet of precious tropical hardwoods.
In preparation for the upcoming much larger harvests, we will make available
a limited quantity of our own beautiful older trees that we are growing
for our own Tropical American Tree Farms account to fund the additional
extraction, processing and production equipment, facilities and personnel
that will soon be required to harvest, process, and produce products from
the upcoming much larger quantities of hardwood lumber.
The wonderful older trees that we are making available are listed on
our What’s New page. They are all beautiful older trees, ranging from
7 to 14 years old, and as you can see from the photos there, some of the
faster growing species are already more than 70 feet tall and 12 inches
in diameter. They are a wonderful opportunity for you to leap ahead many
years in the process of growing tropical hardwoods.
We will make these beautiful older trees available only until they are
spoken for or until we have funded the expansion.
As a thank you to those of you who already own trees, you may include
the quantity of trees you already own to arrive at your quantity pricing
The quantities of these beautiful older trees are quite limited, so whether
as an investment, an asset for your IRA, or cherished gift, it would be
good to order your older trees today!
Distributions
We have now distributed more than $1 million to tree owners for the sale
of your lumber from the early thinnings. Many of you however who elected
to wait for Raleo to create higher values for your young lumber are still
waiting. As you can see from the article above on Raleo, its growth,
wood utilization and the distributions from them have slowed to a trickle
and for that reason, we no longer show Raleo in our projections.
Your lumber value can be calculated from the today’s values on the projections
page, detailed in note 1. The values for lumber marketed locally may be somewhat less
for the next several months or so until construction here in Costa Rica rebounds. The projections do not include the higher value projected for the higher-volume
value-added uses described above.
We will soon report to each of you who have young wood from trees that
have been thinned or will soon be thinned showing what the likely distributions
will be if you choose to sell your young wood on the local market or prefer
for the young wood to go through the value-adding process to create higher
values.
Teak Projections
We continually monitor our projections to see if any adjustments will
help them be more accurate.
Several months ago, we made some adjustments to our
teak projections. We lowered the expected rate of increase in teak lumber prices from 6% per
year to 5% per year. In the months since we made those changes, governments
around the world have pumped unprecedented trillions of dollars into the
world’s economy, either by simply printing new money and/or taking on additional
debt. Our prediction is that these massive injections will create
significant inflation in the next few years and continuing for a number
of years. If that prediction is correct, we would not have needed
to lower our projections from 6% to 5%. To be conservative, we will
leave it as it is for now.
We also, as mentioned above, removed Raleo from the projections and included
the likely pricing if the young lumber from the early thinnings is sold
on the local market. The youngest lumber values are temporarily a
bit less but we anticipate that the values shown will be restored in the
next few months. Even though the youngest lumber values have a
negligible affect on the overall return, we try to be as accurate as
possible.
Again, to be conservative, we have not included in the projections the
higher values from the utilization of the lumber in the value added processes,
nor the much higher values for any logs that may be veneer quality.
Audit
We have asked Hans and team to conduct an exhaustive audit of all of
the trees on our farms, to confirm both their quantities and quality. It is an arduous process because of the large number of trees and extensive
areas of the farms and, considering the amount of work they have in addition
to this audit, will likely take the rest of the year to complete.
So far, their audit shows that 2 - 4% of the trees are not up to the
Tropical American Tree Farms quality standards that we have set. If
they are within trees that will soon be thinned, they will simply be eliminated
as culls. If anyone’s trees are affected beyond the normal cull percentages,
we will report that to the owner and suggest a trade or other solution to
make you whole.
I know this goes beyond our three guarantees, but we genuinely want every
one of you to be happy and to be proud of your trees.
New Articles
A number of articles have been written that were not posted our website
at the time of our last Tree Owners News. You may enjoy reading some
or all.
Raleo - LUXE, Fall
2008
Danza marina - CASA &
ESTILO, April/May 2008
Lady Michelle - Boat
International USA, September 2007
Ondas de Sutil Distincion
- Vanidades, August 2007
Industry Interview - The "Johnny Appleseed" of Costa Rica
- Woodworker's Journal eZine, Issue 211 July 2007
Alfred Karram II - Florida
Design's Miami Home and Decor, Winter 2007
Raleo - Elements of Living,
June 2006
Custom Made - Boca Raton
Magazine, February 2006
Best of Competition Award
- In Luxe, June 2005
Raleo - Interior Design,
Show Daily, 2004
Increased IRA Contributions
We are growing several hundred thousand trees for more than 1,000 enthusiastic
tree owners in their IRA’s, Roth IRA’s and SEP/IRA’s as a very important
tool for retirement planning.
The IRA contribution limits have been raised since our last Tree Owners
News to $5,000 per year for taxpayers under 50, and $6,000 for those age
50 and above. Regardless of the type of your IRA, growing
tropical hardwood trees for harvest, for profit, may be a perfect solution
for your IRA. Our
tree owner relations team would be happy to help
with the paperwork.
Visiting Your Trees
It is truly a joy for us when
you come to see your trees and enjoy the farms and the magnificent
rainforests and conservation areas you are helping to protect!
Our tree owner relations team
is always ready and happy to set up your visit to the farms.
For your planning, our farms
are open for tree owner visits Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM until 2:00
PM, and Saturday 8:00 AM until 11:00 AM. Our farms are closed on Sundays
and all Costa Rican national holidays so that our workers can have time
with their families.
In order to make arrangements
for a wonderful and memorable visit, we need to confirm the final
details of your plans at least three weeks prior to your arrival at the
farms so there is ample time to have the farm manager available to
accompany you and arrange for horses if you would like.
We would love to help you plan a
visit.  
Gentle horses are available for you to
enjoy the miles
of private trails that wind throughout the farms
Addresses
Please always make sure that we have both your most up-to-date e-mail
address, and your regular mailing address as well.
Thank you!
Sherry and I thank God, and thank every one of you,
very much for making all of
this possible. Thank you so much for all of your wonderful support,
enthusiasm and patience. We have truly come a long way together.
Thank you all very much!
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