There is no such thing as entire forests of balsa trees. They grow singly or
in very small, widely scattered groups in the jungle. For hundreds of years,
balsa was actually considered a weed tree. They reproduce by growing hundreds of
long seed pods, which eventually open up and, with the help of the wind, scatter
thousands of new seeds over a large area of the jungle. Each seed is airborne on
its own small wisp of down, similar to the way dandelion seeds spread. The seeds
eventually fall to the ground and are covered by the litter of the jungle. a
There they lay and accumulate until one day there is an opening in the jungle
canopy large enough for the sun's rays to strike the jungle floor and start the
seeds growing. Wherever there is an opening, made either by a farmer or by
another tree dying, balsa will spring up as thick as grass. A farmer is often
hard put to keep his food plot clear of balsa. As the new balsa trees grow, the
strongest will become predominate and the weaker trees will die. By the time
they are mature, there may be only one or two basa trees to an acre of
jungle.
Balsa trees grow very rapidly (like all pesky weeds). Six months after
germination, the tree is about 1-1/2 inches in diameter and 10 - 12 feet tall.
In 6 to 10 years the tree is ready for cutting, having reached a height of 60 to
90 feet tall and a diameter of 12 to 45 inches. If left to continue growing, the
new wood being grown on the outside layers becomes very hard and the tree begins
to rot in the center.
Unharvested, a balsa tree may grow to a diameter of 6 feet or more,
b1giodhxr but very little usable lumber can be obtained from a tree of this
size. The basla leaf is similar in shape to a grape leaf, only a lot bigger.
When the tree is young, these leaves measure a much as four feet across. They
become progressivly smaller as the tree grows older, until they are about 8 - 10
inches across. Balsa is one of the few trees in the jungle which has a simple
leaf shape. This fact alone makes the balsa tree stand out in the jungle. The
more related article comes from http://www.balsafactory.com/.
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