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Farmers reap benefits of planting local trees

A former plunderer of valuable trees in the nation’s forests is now making a decent living from planting and nurturing them.

He is part of a growing trend in the central province of Quang Binh where residents are planting trees that used to grow in local forests instead of easily harvestable ones like cajeput.

The longer-term strategy is helping them earn billions of dong while better protecting the local environment and helping preserve different kinds of valuable local trees.

A four-hectare forest in Ha village, Thanh Hoa commune, Tuyen Hoa district, has valuable trees said to be facing a high risk of extinction, like ironwood, canary-wood and aloe wood.

The forest is the lifelong achievement of farmer Dinh Xuan Dien, 78.

Dien said that in 1997, after a long time of working as illegal logger, he quit the job, unable to witness anymore the destruction he and his peers were wreaking on the nation’s forest and the environment. At that time, the State was encouraging citizens to join a campaign of planting forests.

Dien decided to take wild piece of land, which happened to be a national historic site, to plant trees and set up a farm.

Unlike other people, Dien did not plant trees like eucalyptus and cajeput, focusing instead on what used to grow traditionally in the area, like ironwood, canary-wood and aloe wood.

At that time, no person in the area could germinate these trees, so Dien took saplings from the forest. He did this over many years, taking saplings from the forest and planting them on his land. His patience and care has seen his forest grow to more than 2,000 ironwood trees, 500 canary wood trees and thousands of other trees.

Dien is the only man in the province with such a large collection of ironwood trees. Each of them has a diameter of about 50cm and is several dozen metres tall.

Dien and his family have lived well for several years now on income from forestry products. He sells ironwood mushrooms for 2 million VND (90 USD) per kilogramme, as well as fruits like grapefruits, oranges, jackfruits and bananas.

In 2014, Dien earned 600 million VND (26,600 USD) from selling aloe wood.

“I could have harvested early if I had planted eucalyptus and other kinds of trees. But this would not be good for the environment. I planted local trees with the hope of giving back to the forest its natural beauty and maintaining different kinds of valuble wood trees that I used to destroy.”

Dien is not the only person in the province that has shifted to planting and nurturing local trees.

Nguyen Xuan Thiet lives in Huong Hoa commune, Tuyen Hoa district. He converted 15ha of cajeput forest into one that was home to local trees including ironwood. The forest earns his family an income of several million dong (100 million VND equals 4,300 USD) per year.

Nguyen Tri Phuong, head of Tuyen Hoa district’s Agriculture and Rural Development Division, said that the time taken to plant and harvest local trees was double that of others, but the income it brought in many times more than industrial trees like cajeput and eucalyptus.

Planting local trees not only earned them good profits, but also protected the environment and preserved valuable trees that were in danger of being lost forever, he said.

Source: VNA Date:2017-05-15

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