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[email protected] (todd the wood junkie)

01/12/2004 8:04 AM

TATF 10% off

A year ago I looked at Tropical American Tree Farms to have them raise
some teak as a financial investment. Before I even considered
investing money, I asked them for references and they gave me 3 (2 of
which were in my city). I called each and everyone basically said the
same thing. That the people running the show were trustworthy, but
that there were 2 main problems:

1. The 8-10 year 'thinnings' didn't produce commercially usable teak
since it was so young. Young teak doesn't have the water/rot
resistence the older stuff has. Basically you had to wait 25 years
before you'd have something in return. To solve that problem they
were trying to create a market for that young wood with their own line
of very high end 'indoor' furniture. Not sure where that's going.

2. The company had no board of directors, so if something happend to
the owners, you could be outta luck.

Now I get spammed from them saying they will sell you 3 year old teak
trees, which are supposedly 30 ft tall, for %10 percent off the newly
planted prices. Sounds interesting for woodworking, since you have
only 5 yrs approx to wait until you have a decent supply of teak.

Has anyone actually done this with the intent of getting cheap
tropical wood for woodworking? Is it financially viable to get the
wood shipped to you from the thinnings? Any similar experiences?


This topic has 2 replies

Gg

"George"

in reply to [email protected] (todd the wood junkie) on 01/12/2004 8:04 AM

01/12/2004 12:59 PM

Seems as if we had a contributor who was in the teak farming business who
spent quite a bit of time unloading his share of wood. Anyone remember the
name?

"todd the wood junkie" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> A year ago I looked at Tropical American Tree Farms to have them raise
> some teak as a financial investment. Before I even considered
> investing money, I asked them for references and they gave me 3 (2 of
> which were in my city). I called each and everyone basically said the
> same thing. That the people running the show were trustworthy, but
> that there were 2 main problems:
>
> 1. The 8-10 year 'thinnings' didn't produce commercially usable teak
> since it was so young. Young teak doesn't have the water/rot
> resistence the older stuff has. Basically you had to wait 25 years
> before you'd have something in return. To solve that problem they
> were trying to create a market for that young wood with their own line
> of very high end 'indoor' furniture. Not sure where that's going.
>
> 2. The company had no board of directors, so if something happend to
> the owners, you could be outta luck.
>
> Now I get spammed from them saying they will sell you 3 year old teak
> trees, which are supposedly 30 ft tall, for %10 percent off the newly
> planted prices. Sounds interesting for woodworking, since you have
> only 5 yrs approx to wait until you have a decent supply of teak.
>
> Has anyone actually done this with the intent of getting cheap
> tropical wood for woodworking? Is it financially viable to get the
> wood shipped to you from the thinnings? Any similar experiences?

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to [email protected] (todd the wood junkie) on 01/12/2004 8:04 AM

01/12/2004 12:17 PM


"George" wrote in message
> Seems as if we had a contributor who was in the teak farming business who
> spent quite a bit of time unloading his share of wood. Anyone remember
the
> name?

Jeremy?

http://tinyurl.com/5z9tp

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