Bamboo facts

The fastest growing woody plant on this
planet. It grows one third faster than the fastest growing tree. Some
species can grow up to 1 meter per day. One can almost "watch it grow".
This growth pattern makes it easily accessible in a minimal amount of
time. Size ranges from miniatures to towering culms of 60 meters.
A viable replacement for wood. Bamboo is one of the strongest building
materials. Bamboo's tensile strength is 28,000 per square inch versus
23,000 for steel. In the tropics is it possible to plant and grow your
own bamboo home. In a plot 20m x 20m2, in the course of 5 years, two 8m
x 8m homes can be constructed from the harvest. Every year after that
the yield is one additional house per plot.
An
enduring natural resource. Bamboo can be selectively harvested annually.
Bamboo provided the first re-greening in Hiroshima after the atomic
blast in 1945. Thomas Edison successfully used a carbonized bamboo
filament in his first experiment with the light bulb.
Versatile with a short growth cycle. There are over 1000 species of
bamboo on the earth. The diversity makes bamboo adaptable to many
environments. It can be harvested in 3-5 years versus 10-20 years for
most softwoods. Bamboo tolerates extremes of precipitation, from 30-250
inches of annual rainfall.
Bamboo has been used for everything from
furniture to houses, fishing rods to arrows, hair combs to chopsticks.
An ancient medicine.

Bamboo
has for centuries been used in Ayurveda and Chinese acupuncture.
The powdered hardened secretion from bamboo is used internally to treat
asthma, coughs and can be used a an aphrodisiac. In China, ingredients
from the root of the black bamboo help treat kidney disease. Roots and
leaves have also been used to treat venereal disease and cancer. Sap is
said to reduce fever and ash will cure prickly heat. Current research
point to bamboo's potential in a number of medicinal uses
Religion and bamboo


Integrally involved in culture and the arts. Bamboo is a mystical plant
as a symbol of strength, flexibility, tenacity, endurance and
compromise. Throughout Asia, bamboo has for centuries been integral to
religions ceremonies, art, music and daily life. It is the paper, the
brush and the inspiration of poems and paintings. Among the earliest
historical records, 2nd century B.C. were written on green bamboo strips
strung together in a bundle with silk thread. Instruments made of bamboo
create unique resonance.
Our Products

Our bamboo lamps are a soft touch to your
living enviroment. They emmit a soft light shining through the bamboo
weave for immediate relaxation.

You can Find our products here:
Bamboo lamps |