We follow sustainable harvesting techniques to extract resinous wood from the infected trees. The process of sustainability starts right from the inoculation method, wherein technologies are adopted in a way that trees can be harvested part by part, over the years, from the branches, and simultaneously they have the opportunity for regeneration.
Our team, together with the farmers, assesses the infection status of a tree by examining the colour of the inert trunks, sapwood, and branches before cutting them away. The bark and trunk of the suspected tree are chopped till the nearest part of the infected area, leaving the main part of the tree alive. We leave the tree, no matter how big it is, when there’s no indication of resinous wood. Trees cut by the company are only those that have shown the indication of reaction, possessed fragrance, and shown the production of resin during the checking process. Portions of the tree are harvested where resins accumulate, and allow the remaining part of the tree to survive.
Meanwhile, the number of mature Agarwood trees has been maintained, suggesting that there is regularity in availability for the next harvesting. Logging activities are in the form of selective harvesting to limited, small-scale clear-cutting. The goal is to harvest in such a way that it allows these species the chance to regenerate, and ensures that the plantation’s overall ecological health is maintained, restored, or even enhanced. The hallmark of our sustainable plantation, from a purely ecological perspective, is the extent to which forestry practices mimic natural patterns of disturbance and regeneration. Our sustainable plantations balance the needs of the environment, wildlife, and forest communities supporting decent incomes while conserving Agarwood trees for future generations.