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Hot weather, drought affect many Thai provinces


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Posted

Hot weather, drought affect many provinces
By Digital Content

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KALASIN, April 24 -- Hot weather and drought have affected many provinces in Thailand, damaging agricultural areas while the Lam Pao Dam in this northeastern province will stop discharging water on Saturday.

Villagers in Pha Sawoei subdistrict of Somdet district here, on higher ground at the foot of the Phu Phan mountain range, have been severely hit by drought.

They must walk more than one kilometre for drinking water and when they get there the queue is very long.

The Lam Pao Dam now contains only 17 per cent -- 358 million cubic metres -- of its capacity, so the dam has to stop releasing water Saturday.

In the northern province of Lamphun, water shortage has affected longan orchards, with many trees already dead from the lack of water.

Some orchards are cutting down all their longan trees as they have died.

Water resources in four districts--Bang Hong, Mae Tha, Wiang Nong Long and the provincial seat--have entirely dried out.

It is now expected that longan production this year will drop after produce more than 170,000 tonnes last year.

The drought has also led to a shortage of limes in the market. In the eastern seaboard province of Chon Buri's Si Racha district, one large size lime price have risen to Bt18 and the fruit is scarce.

Many consumers have opted to buy limes from Cambodia, which are cheaper but having less juice.

Chanthaburi lime sellers say that lime prices this year are at the highest level in 20 years.

Thousand of local residents and tourists in the north have flocked to Chiang Rai's Kok River beach to cool down due to the hot weather. (MCOT online news)

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-- TNA 2014-04-24

Posted

Well all of this weather must have missed us here in HH, it has not rained for weeks and weeks, nearly 3 months now I am quite sure of that. It threatened to rain today with dark skies looming, but it didn't to my dismay as the heat is unrelentless. And now another heatwave, how much hotter can it get? I think next year I may move up to Northern Laos for 3 months for the first time since living here, and that is saying something as I can normally handle the heat pretty well.

Also I cannot help but notice the emphasis on the shortage of ma-now, who really cares that much about limes that buying slightly less juicy ones from Cambodia ends up being in the news?

Posted

Also I cannot help but notice the emphasis on the shortage of ma-now, who really cares that much about limes that buying slightly less juicy ones from Cambodia ends up being in the news?

Tom,

I know some people that really care...all the Thai street vendors who work hard to sell lime juice.

And everyone that cooks Thai dishes since lime juice is quite important in most of them.

I guess the news is more interested in how weather events affect actual working-class Thais and not so much about how frustrating it must be for you to read about.

;-)

Posted

Also I cannot help but notice the emphasis on the shortage of ma-now, who really cares that much about limes that buying slightly less juicy ones from Cambodia ends up being in the news?

Me... I like to squeeze a few drops in my ice-cold SML as the sun dips.

It's hot here too.

As to drought, well it wasn't apparent last weekend when water was being thrown around with gay abandon.

Muppets.

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