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Teak Wood Is An Extremely Strong And Beautiful Wood For Your Outdoor Furniture

By: Patricia Woods

Teak is a genus of tropical hardwoods with a scientific tag of Tectona. It is a hardwood ingrained to South and Southeast Asia and is normally part of a monsoon jungle, maturing on low hills, far away from the shore line. Teak is a deciduous tree, releasing its leaves in the waterless season and is not included in a tropical rainforest. It is a large tree, and will easily grow 30 to 40 meters tall. Teak has a big concentration of oils and minerals, causing the wood to be waxy and flexible. This makes a wood that is water resistant and insect resistant, as well as a strong, straight grain to resist bending. Teak is usually honey to mocha brown, however it can have a reddish hue. If it remains raw and bare to the elements, it can dim to a silvery gray, though a yearly oil treatment can keep it's natural complexion. Teak is ingrained to Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, The Philippines and India.

Teak has been utilized for over two thousand years and is noted in poetry from that century. Teak logs last forever as the main structural component in buildings centuries old in India, and also in thousand year old temples. This shows the amazing function of Teak to last when stressed is placed on it. Teak was a major 18th Century export for China, where flooring, cabinets, paneling and multiple other wood features were exported to Europe. Teak was frequently used for art objects, though the strong wood made this a difficult process, needing a lot of resharpening of tools. Later in the Victorian Era, this was greatly overcome and Teak art creations became more main stream.

The strength and salt water repellant characteristics made Teak an asset to the Royal Navy, and following World War I, when many battered warships were being scrapped, the crew members were in awe by the great condition of the Teak decking and determined to save the wood. A lot of it became garden furniture, making the tradition of teak patio furniture. The Royal Navy was not the only user of Teak; the unique qualities of this wood made it popular around the world among ship manufacturers in the age of sailing. The momentous whaling ship, the Charles W. Morgan, stored in Mystic Seaport, Connecticut that was constructed in 1841 and saw hard miles with several around the world journeys but still appears like new.

The continuous increasing ease of Teak building led to Teak becoming a enormous component of the Danish modern style of furniture, extremely excepted in the 50s and 60s. This furniture is now undergoing a renaissance in popularity and authentic Teak furniture from this time is very excepted with collectors and others.

It is also heavily manufactured in Indonesia, there Dutch traders grew tree farms in 1816. Perum Perhutani, an agency of the Indonesian Government, operates the tree farms today. They strictly limit trees taken and new harvests to ensure very high quality wood. Tests have displayed that Indonesia Teak can grow twenty meters in fifteen years. Today Indonesia and Burma, indubitably known as Myanmar, have become the world’s biggest exporters of Teak.


Patricia Woods is a interior design specialist with a passion for outdoor teak furniture. For more information on Patricia and her line of teak aluminum furniture, click here.
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