In April, a five of us from Las Lomitas drove down the
PanAmerican highway to Siguatepeque (See-gwa-teh-pek-eh), the next major wide
spot in the road heading south. It is a beautiful drive for those of us that
enjoy beautiful drives up into the mountains. For thirteen year-olds who have
scarcely ridden in a car, it is apparently a nauseating, terrifying death trip.
However, an hour later we arrived at Semillas Tropicales (SETRO) with no vomit
in the car. SETRO is a company that collects/distributes/sells/stores high
quality seeds of trees utilized for lumber, fruit, and other agroforestry
endeavors. We had arrived to attend a workshop with Don Oscar, the owner of the
company.
The group of muchachos was nervous and a little embarrassed
to meet an educated, successful man, but when he greeted us with an enormous
bucket of mini candy bars, everyone got over their shame pretty quickly. He is
a wonderfully-disarming man that treated the young men with a kind of respect
that they very seldom receive. He did a great job explaining the importance of
trees and the basic principles of agroforestry – not to mention the potential
profits of sustainably managed harvest of mahogany, teak, laurel, and other
tropical hardwoods.
After our brief introduction, we took a walk around the
property to see the sprouting room, seed storage room, and a few examples of
the trees most commonly grown for their beautiful wood. Most examples were
around twelve years old, and the guys were blown away to see how large some of
the trees were already. Many of them were already worth $3000-$4000. No wonder
this guy has so much candy.
After a couple of hours with Don Oscar, we loaded back up into the Hurl Machine with some mahogany, cedar, and ornamental palm seeds to
head back down the mountains to our own baby mountain– with an obligatory lakeside
stop for ice cream, debriefing, and staring into the water at fish large and
small, swimming and floating.
Now that the weather has begun to cool back down and we’ve
received a couple of rains, we’ll soon be planting seeds and bagging up the
little plants to look for potential buyers from our Las Lomitas greenhouse. We
already have several interested parties and are positive about the potential of
a little microbusiness up on our hill selling and planting hardwoods. We’ll
keep you updated over the coming months to let you know how it goes.
Absolutely AWESOME!!
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