|
The Forest And The Trees: OGA's Raul Hernandez and Frank
Marrero harvest for the future.
Two Good OGA saves the forest and patio furniture, too
By Bill Strubbe
A conundrum between environmentalists and loggers has long been
how to supply lumber for homes, decking and furniture while maintaining
viable forest habitats and watersheds for the future. This is often
viewed as an either/or struggle, but Raul Hernandez of Annapolis'
Old-Growth Again (OGA) Restoration Forestry and Forever Furniture
believes that his organization may have achieved a happy medium.
"We're not a preservation organization, but rather a conservation
nonprofit that restores forest lands yet also harvests timber for
firewood and furniture," explains Hernandez, 45, who divides
his time between Graton and Annapolis. "Our limited harvest
rate actually allows the forest to grow bigger."
Experiencing an existential crisis in his late 20s, Hernandez jettisoned
a promising journalism career in Miami to study instead at an ashram
in Marin. Eventually frustrated with certain aspects of monastic
life... and what he sees as the self-perpetuating politics of organizations
such as Greenpeace and the Sierra Club, he set out to synchronize
his spiritual ideals with environmental work.
Joining the Institute for Sustainable Forestry and delving into
books--particularly Gordon Robinson's 1988 The Forest and the Trees:
A Guide to Excellent Forestry--Hernandez found his knowledge literally
taking root in 1994 through the purchase of a tract of 40 steep
acres above Sea Ranch that had been clear-cut in the 1950s and '60s.
Through backbreaking work, Hernandez and his partner, Frank Marrero
of Fairfax, restored the ravaged hillsides acre by acre. Living
in a solar-powered cabin, they thinned out the tan oaks, manzanitas
and poison oak, and loped off hundreds of redwood trees' lower branches
to raise the canopy, allowing more light for the 5,000 fledgling
conifers OGA plants annually. With the help of a sturdy pair of
Percheron horses, Sparky and Ike, smaller trees were hauled out
without damaging the land, and sold as firewood.
Hardwoods presently comprise about 50 percent of OGA's trees, but
over the next 20 to 30 years the nonprofit aims for stands of about
80 to 90 percent conifers. And instead of allowing some 1,000 trees
to crowd an acre, as some timber growers do, their goal is to return
the land to its original state of about 100 to 150 larger, higher-quality,
trees per acre.
With firewood sales, charitable donations and grants covering only
a portion of the thinning costs and the seedling nursery, a furniture
component was initially born in 2000 as a gift for patrons. One
recipient was so impressed with OGA head carpenter Antonio Toledo's
craftsmanship that he suggested the nonprofit market its redwood
furniture as a means to offset conservation efforts. "It's
now become our primary funding source," Hernandez explains.
The hefty outdoor furniture ranges in style from picnic tables,
Adirondack chairs, porch swings, gliders, pergolas, planter boxes,
garden benches, children's furniture, chaise lounges and even a
double chaise lounge with a reclining back.
"Pieces can be customized," Hernandez says. "Most
tables are available with benches attached or separate. Table- and
benchtop corners can be squared or rounded, tabletops can come with
or without umbrella holes."
Whatever a customer's specifications, OGA's Forever Furniture is
unique in that all boards are cut a full 2-by-6 inches thick (most
picnic tables and benches are only 1 1/2 inches thick and 5 1/4
inches wide). The extra girth significantly increases the furniture's
appearance, sturdiness and durability. Pieces have been purchased
by local wineries, and can also be found in a park for handicapped
children in the Sierras, at the Vandenberg Air Force Base and even
in the Pentagon.
The finest, tight-grain redwood that Forever Furniture makes is
milled from "buckskin" logs--those trees abandoned by
the original loggers that were discovered and unburied from a hillside
by Hernandez and crew. Some of these well-preserved logs are a stout
4 feet in diameter and up to 40 feet long. Regardless of grade,
all have a 20-year decay warranty and a plaque that reads "Proceeds
Used for Forest Restoration."
The restoration continues to grow. Currently managing about 580
acres, Hernandez hopes to expand OGA's restorative work to neighboring
forest tracts that might otherwise be felled by industrial, "liquidation"
methods.
"The goal is to restore and preserve a healthy habitat while
selectively logging out the over-represented species," he says.
"We're convinced that this is, in the long term, not only better
for the land, but also more profitable."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information on Old-Growth Again Restoration Forestry and
Forever Redwood Furniture, call 707.495.4955 or visit www.oldgrowthagain.org.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|