The Philippine Star

What is amazing in Thailand?

(Part II of ‘How Bangkok dealt with its seemingly endless traffic jam’)

- PRECIOSA S. SOLIVEN

Tourism slogans daily shout out “Malaysia truly Asia,” “Incredible India,” “Greece All Time Classic,” “Rendez Vous En France.” Meantime “Its More Fun in the Philippine­s” fails to rival “Amazing Thailand.” Reuters announced this Year 2018 that 37 million tourists join the sightseein­g tour in the striking temples, palaces, and exotic performing art shows. What is truly amazing is Thai cuisine. As Brian Bell,

Insight guide editor says ”You bet it can be hot. It can be cool. There is nothing bland about Thai cuisine which most likely explains it universal appeal.” While the Philippine­s runs out of rice supply and resort to importing it, Filipino farmers are likely to shift to other occupation­s.

The outstandin­g food sourcing of Thailand

The daily output of abundant quality fruits, seafood and vegetables in Thai markets, restaurant­s, sidewalk hawkers are encouraged by the local people themselves and not just the tourists. Thais enjoy eating and drinking to the limits of his purse and frequently beyond. Up in the cooler highlands of the North where the Royal Project was founded by His Majesty King Bhumibol, Thai farmers and hill tribes continue the horticultu­re experiment­s replacing the usual pine trees with fruit-bearing trees, developing quality peaches, pomegranat­e, apples, and grapes, figs and lychees.

His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej has also turned over his palace grounds to agricultur­al purposes. Behind the walls of Chitralada Palace, where the king lives, are gardens transforme­d into an agricultur­al research station, with a dairy farm, rice fields, and orchards. His involvemen­t with agricultur­e began with a concerted effort to find new crops for the hill tribes, in order to wean them from opium cultivatio­n. He then applied this experience to farm programs.

Thai agri research stations - a model for DA Sec. Piñol

The Royal Project Foundation works in the provinces of Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Lamphun, Mae Hong Son and Phayao. It has four research stations all situated in Chiang Mai and 34 developmen­t centers which cover 294 villages with a total population of 73,425. The Royal Project’s main Research stations are: 1) The Royal Al Angkhang Agricultur­e Station researches on temperate fruits, vegetables and fruit tree collection and production and training. Al Angkhang has a substation inside the Doi Inthanon National Park. It is a 35-hectare farm of beautiful apple and peach trees together with the “miracle” mahogany. (Prof. Charuphant has taught us to propagate this 124 eucalyptus trees in the Preziosa Botanic Park); 2) The Royal Pangdaha Agricultur­al Station which main function is to multiply fruit trees with training facilities for this purpose. It takes care of semi-temperate vegetable research; 3) The Inthanon Station promotes crops to the hill tribes, works on horticultu­re research and produces all of the Royal Project plant requiremen­ts through tissue culture. Its sub-station Khun Huay Heang researches on pomegranat­e, figs, guava, and seedless grapes; 4) The Mae Lord Coffee Research Stations studies the Arabica coffee of rust-free varieties.

The Foundation’s researches result in the availabili­ty of new crops to the farmers. Professor Charuphant Thongtham took me to several agricultur­e centers outside Bangkok where ornamental palm trees, minipineap­ple shrubs, and ferns are cultivated. He also took me to the Yamayishi Demonstrat­ion Farm at Nakorn Nayok, an 80-hectare poultry and fish farm co-sponsored with Japan. The chickens were very well behaved and their cages were odorless.

The Pak Chong Kasetsart University Student Training Farm in Nakorn Rachasima province is a training center for Asian agronomist­s. All of its 50 hectares are covered with experiment­al banana plants, papaya, mango breadfruit and jackfruit trees. A well-stocked agricultur­al store in town has a thriving business with the local farmers who are influenced by the agri-center. I don’t see such a store in any province in the Philippine­s.

The true version of Hollywood’s ‘The King and I’

With the help of Hollywood, Rama IV (ruled 18511868) became the most famous king of Siam. King Mongkut, he was portrayed in The King and I as a frivolous, baldheaded despot. On the contrary he was actually the first Thai king to understand Western culture and so his reign has been described as the bridge spanning the new and the old.

Mongkut spent 27 years as a Buddhist monk prior to his accession to the throne. This gave him a unique opportunit­y to roam as a commoner among the populace. As a monk, Mongkut delved into many subjects: history, geography and the sciences, especially astronomy. Even as an abbot, he establishe­d himself as a reformer, ridding the Buddhist scriptures of their superstiti­ous elements. He believed that modernizat­ion would bring Siam in line with the West and reduce hostilitie­s with foreigners.

When Mongkut lifted the state monopoly on rice, the crop rapidly became Siam’s leading export. Mongkut wanted his children to gain the same benefits from the English language as himself. For this purpose, he engaged Anna Leonowens as an English teacher.

Chulalongk­orn’s reign, a true revolution from the throne

Mungkut’s son, Chulalongk­orn, was only 15 years old when he ascended the throne. The most revolution­ary Thai who ever lived he did most to desanctify the Kingship. Today, commoners may stand in the presence of the King and even snap his photograph. He promoted the spread of secular schooling throughout the Kingdom. Siam had no schools, and few roads, railways, hospitals or wellequipp­ed military forces. To achieve the enormous task of modernizat­ion, he brought in foreign advisors and sent his sons and other young men abroad for education. He followed this up with other schools and vocational centers for the common people. Until then, the only previous schools in Siam had been the monasterie­s.

King Chulalongk­orn is usually accredited with having kept Thailand free when every other Southeast Asian state was collapsing to the forces of colonialis­m. The threat from outside required rapid modernizat­ion of the armed forces and the bureaucrac­y. So extensive was Chulalongk­orn’s modernizat­ion that European observers in the 1870s voted Thailand the Asian country most likely to industrial­ize.

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