Mahogany Trees.
In Central and South America the revenues of many districts depend on the skill and activity of the maho^ gany hunters Mahogany trees do not grow in groups , much less are there whole forests of them. They are scattered, usually concealed in thickets. It requires skill and experience to iind them To fell a tree involves the work of two men for a whole day. On account of a thick, thorny growth near the base of the tree, a scaffold is erected 1 around it, and above this, at a hught of from 10ft to 15ft, the tree is c'<t, so that the best pan is really lost. The felled tree is then freed oi bnanches, u <nd haul-1 en a rough waggon by oxen to the nearest river, where rafts are mude .ui<; floated down.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19020724.2.74
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New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXX, Issue 30, 24 July 1902, Page 29
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138Mahogany Trees. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXX, Issue 30, 24 July 1902, Page 29
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