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Cultivated Agarwood Inducing Process

Farmed Agarwood may seem the best action to do these days, particularly with the uproar on the shortage of Agarwood trees coming from the wild which is struggling to meet worldwide demand. But is the practice of inducing artificial chemicals and other foreign objects to the tree to promote resin growth considered an ethical practice from the tree's view? This is actually the question usually raised while we have discussions with green hands about farmed agarwood.

oud oil - There has been a flurry of agarwood plantations being exposed and promoted by men and women of all over, including individuals who scarcely know what is Oud, ever because the Aquilaria species of flowers and its particular family were annexed to the CITES convention.

The catchline for their marketing is infectious - that Oud is another hot investment property, pound for pound more expensive than Gold.

Oud, just like diamond, has different levels of worthiness, while it's indeed an expensive commodity, and professionals understand that farmed agarwood does not fair also high up in that value list, albeit with some exclusions.

The approach that farmers utilize to induce the farmed agarwood tree are changing. From drilling chemical liquid inducer injections to bamboo twigs, they are intended to penetrate deeply into the heart of the tree in order to cause hurt and anxiety to it. Ironically today, some Oud sellers are ardently boasting of their substance and artificial free organic Ouds but their source of agarwood are these very same farms who use substances to make the resinous heartwood.

While cultivated versions of other plants, like oranges and apples, for instance, do not require the endurance of painstaking impaling methods to keep fruit, the unique agarwood prized 'fruit' - the resinous Oud - could be the result of it being subjected to a stressful situation and environment. In the open, the natural resin formation causes of fungal and bacterial disease, soil erosion and hilly growth areas are a marked contrast to what these modern farmers are doing.

Trees are really a living thing and a green thumb would likely confirm for the reality these trees would certainly experience damage within the process of modern day agarwood farming.

In case you have had the chance to buy a 'bargain' agarwood chip or acrylic on eBay, we invite you to try Sultanul Oud premium and wild agarwood oil and chips.

More to come with this.
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