Nothing leaves the mill unaccounted.
The house creed is not a slogan — it's the operating loop. The offcut of one step is the fuel of the next. The waste heat of the money dries the wood. Here is how the loop closes, and how we intend to steward the land it runs on.
Hardwood felled and sawn on family land — milled, not clear-cut. Selective, species by species, from a 33-acre Canje stand we steward rather than strip.
Sawdust and slab waste most mills pay to dump become fuel. Nothing leaves the mill unaccounted — the offcut is the start of the next thing, not the end of this one.
Scrap-fed gasification and renewables are designed to run the site. The fire that cuts the wood becomes the fire that powers the work.
That power secures the chain — proof-of-work on real, local watts, not someone else’s grid.
Miner heat is recovered to kiln-dry the next board — that is the design. The byproduct of the money becomes the input of the wood. The loop closes.
The cut feeds the burn · the burn mines the chain · the heat dries the next board
Cooperative, not extractive
We operate as a partner to Guyana — working with the GEA and local authorities, hiring locally, and planning a waste-wood collection program to pay neighbors for material that would otherwise burn in the open.
Selective harvest
Guyana’s forests hold 1,000+ species. We cut selectively from our own stand and source responsibly — milling value into each board rather than volume out of the land.
Honest about the stage
We are pre-deployment. The diesel genset is real and so is the plan to retire it. Every renewable phase here is a target we are building toward, not a claim we’ve already shipped. We’d rather under-promise on family land than over-promise to a feed.