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Why bamboo?

Environmental impact of Bamboo: 

It grows fast.

  • Bamboo is not a tree—it’s a grass, and it grows like one. Many species of bamboo can grow two feet or more a day.
  • When it’s harvested, it need not be replanted, because it will grow a new shoot from its extensive root system, often 4 to 5 new shoots.
  • It renews itself readily, unlike hardwood trees, which, once cut, are gone forever. Canadian Maple trees take around 40-60 years to mature before they can be cut down.  Bamboo is an endless renewable resource.   

It enhances the environment.

  • Farmed bamboo stabilizes the earth with its roots, preventing erosion.
  • It takes in greenhouse gasses and produces oxygen. In fact 35% more oxygen than an equivalent stand of trees.
  • It can also provide habitat for birds and animals (though our bamboo is not preferred by pandas, and is therefore panda-safe). 
  • In nature, bamboo filters heavy metals from groundwater and removes four times more carbon dioxide from the air than an equivalent-size stand of trees.

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