Rice nearly ready for harvesting. |
I spent a day touring the fields in northeast Thailand (the region known by Thais as "Isan" or "Esan"), where many different crops are grown by families who live in the nearby village. Plots (or "rai") vary in dimensions, depending on the family's total farm size, and on what type of crop is grown. The season was about to change from rainy (June-October) to dry (November-May), so I was fortunate to see the fields in transition. I plan to go back for the rice harvest in November.
I was not interested in seeing the huge corporate farms here that have become the norm in the U.S., and threaten the way of life of Thai farmers as well, but instead I wanted to see the traditional farms that sustain families. They remind me of the way farming was done in the States 50-100 years ago (I spent many a wonderful summer on my grandparents' small farm in the midwest 50 years ago), although the farms here tend to be much smaller: most Thai farmers grow more than one crop and supplement their income and diets by raising livestock, green vegetables, chili peppers, bananas and coconuts, most of it next to their homes in the village, but some also in the countryside.
Bananas grow as clusters, along field borders and in backyards. Water buffalo, the traditional beast of burden in Thailand, graze on non-rice grasses. |
Sugar cane |
Rubber trees |
Fresh latex, collected year-round |
Rubber farmers often build simple houses in the grove of trees they tend. No electricity; light is by candles, and warmth provided by campfires during the "winter" (November-January). |
"Mahn" (taro) |
Small taro tuber |
Mahn canes. After harvesting the tubers, the stems are trimmed and those with good nodes for sprouting are stacked to dry. |
Large mahn tubers being transported for sale |
Most farmers sell their produce and meats locally. Here a merchant weighs a chicken that was bought from a local farmer. |
A young woman stir-fries garlic and red onions over a small charcoal cooker. The garlic and onions were chopped on the tree section cutting board next to her. |
The garlic and onions are pounded together with dried red chili peppers and made into a paste that is stored and used as a garnish with meals. |
No comments:
Post a Comment