thehelmsman Posted August 17, 2014 Share Posted August 17, 2014 Reading the responses towards the topic of raising cattle leads me to believe most of the guys living in Issan villages didn't grow up in the country. Just curious, how many of you were city slickers growing up??? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kudel Posted August 17, 2014 Share Posted August 17, 2014 Most are currency slickers after the financial meltdown there was a big surge of foreigners moving to isaan specially Brits who got 75 baht to the pound back in the day before the financial meltdown most hate living there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pigeonjake Posted August 17, 2014 Share Posted August 17, 2014 im not in iaasan, i live in the sakoew province, but i was from farm stock, my mum still has a 5 acre smallholding, so me living in the village and starting a small pig farm was were i wanted to be, now not just the pigs, but chickens, 3 typs of duck,fish, pigeons and even budgies, but many will know i still go to work too, so i have the best of both worlds Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cooked Posted August 17, 2014 Share Posted August 17, 2014 Yes, I was a bit surprised at the nonsense of many of the answers on that thread. It sort of developed into a Thai bashing thread without coming out into the daylight as such. I should think that relatively few TV members actually live on a farm even in Isaan and that even fewer have a farming background. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post thehelmsman Posted August 17, 2014 Author Popular Post Share Posted August 17, 2014 Yes, I was a bit surprised at the nonsense of many of the answers on that thread. It sort of developed into a Thai bashing thread without coming out into the daylight as such. I should think that relatively few TV members actually live on a farm even in Isaan and that even fewer have a farming background. Suppose if it wasn't for nonsense TV wouldn't be as entertaining to read. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wayned Posted August 17, 2014 Share Posted August 17, 2014 I'm not in Issan but just a few kilometers away. The attachment is a picture of my new Limo that I bought in the US and had it dis-assembled, containerized and shipped here, all 117 parts. I just finished assembling it and it has started its job of harvesting corn. As far as cattle is concerned the Thais around me buy them,breed them, raise them and sell them the same way that we did in the US.. And the reason that they do it is for one, and only one reason, MONEY! They don't eat a lot of beef locally but they do raise and sell them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post SantiSuk Posted August 18, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2014 Not an isaan farmer - just a financier of isaan farm land (same as most). Live in an Isaan village, but not remote Born in a village and played on farms. Left rural life aged 18. Resumed rural life aged 57. 40 year career in Urban Leeds, urban Houston and the City of London Not interested in farming. Not my expertise, too hot and no money in it. Might look for serious investment opportunities one day but Thai copy-cat mentality will probably persuade me otherwise. Difficult to find something with high barriers to entry even if you have serious capital (and some Thais, nay even a few Isaanites, have more money than you think) Hats off to those who are interested in it. Some of the nicest people 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
isanbirder Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 I've lived all my life previously in cities..... but they come a lot slicker than I am. I've been a birder since I was 14, though, and was at boarding school in the countryside. I've now lived in Isan for 6 years, and I love the space, the greenery, the smell of fresh rain (occasionally)... and, as auctioneers would say, the occasional waft of smoke from burning corpses does not detract. We have pigs, chickens, cattle, buffaloes, riceland and some fruit; I eat the fruit and the eggs, and leave the rest to those who know better. When I make the occasional trip back to Chiangmai, I feel like a country cousin, and that suits me fine. Bangkok? Not if I can help it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meatboy Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 been with animals all my life,city slicker? more like a valley's licker. brought up in the mining valley's of wales,the land of sheep shaggers and that funny shaped ball. greyhounds and horses were my life,with the occasional two legged dog thrown in. that was till I came to LOS. 2yrs,in patts.3yrs in bkk, and now settled and loving every minute of my life in issan with my beloved and my wife. as for farm animals,i love beef,pork,chicken and duck,and oh boy cant wait till someone farms some SHEEP. T.I.T. TAFFY IN THAILAND. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post PREM-R Posted August 18, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2014 Most are currency slickers after the financial meltdown there was a big surge of foreigners moving to isaan specially Brits who got 75 baht to the pound back in the day before the financial meltdown most hate living there. "...most hate living there." Really, that is not my experience in the 12 years I have been in Isaan. On what do you base your assertion? 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Jip99 Posted August 18, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2014 Most are currency slickers after the financial meltdown there was a big surge of foreigners moving to isaan specially Brits who got 75 baht to the pound back in the day before the financial meltdown most hate living there. "...most hate living there." Really, that is not my experience in the 12 years I have been in Isaan. On what do you base your assertion? I agree. Most Farangs that I have met reside here by choice and are, at worst, content with their lot. In the vast majority of cases residence is determined by where the teerak hailed from. I gave my missus the choice of having a house built in her village, on land she owned in nearby village or in the middle of 23 rai of rice land. Failing that we could look at other areas of Thailand. I was a 'townie' and I had some reservations about being isolated but I knew that I did not want to live in the village. I sat on our front balcony having coffee this morning watching the birds and the butterflies flitting around the garden in the morning sun. I believe I saw the grass grow. The dog was asleep under the shade of the truck and I could just hear distant chanting from the temple. A gentle breeze wafted through from the nearby hill, helping to keep the temperature down to 26 degrees. 2 years on I am very content with where we are. If that contentment changes I will move, I will not stay where I am not happy............. that is what brought me to Thailand. 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
klikster Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Born on a 40 acre dirt farm in NE Ok. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post cdmtdm Posted August 18, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2014 from far nth east kimberley West Aust ..The Last Frontier .... wild west !! Isaan is a resort compared to back on the farm in Oz 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GinBoy2 Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Live in Isaan, which I love, but I don't farm, and unlike a lot don't invest, buy, lose,farm land. That being said, I grew up in rural California, both parents worked on farms in central valley. I however, did well in school went to college and after seeing how hard my parents worked, vowed it would be a cold day in hell before I took to farm labor. I love to watch a farang working hard on 'his' rice farm....now where's my Gin & Tonic? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deacon Bell Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Wonder if present farang Issan residents are mostly city slickers Hidden away in a rural cave, moaning and cribbing online, as their salaried wife is eating bugs while watching the latest lakorn.... every single night.... would be my guess. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
swissie Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Most Farangs living in the sticks have "Family-Ties". That's nice. Without this, on their own, they would cry out "what am I doing in such a place" and hop on the the next bus back to BKK. The Farang developing into a Farmer is based on the thinking that the land that surrounds the big house must be put to good use to eventually bring back some of the capital outlays associated with the cost of the big house. City slicker or not. Farang will eventually realize that (unless on a very big scale), farming doesn't pay. Especially not in Thailand. This may be the reason that at least 1 family member works as a hotel-receptionist in Pattaya. And that's the way it is and will not change in the near future. No offense. Cheers . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thehelmsman Posted August 18, 2014 Author Share Posted August 18, 2014 Most Farangs living in the sticks have "Family-Ties". That's nice. Without this, on their own, they would cry out "what am I doing in such a place" and hop on the the next bus back to BKK. The Farang developing into a Farmer is based on the thinking that the land that surrounds the big house must be put to good use to eventually bring back some of the capital outlays associated with the cost of the big house. City slicker or not. Farang will eventually realize that (unless on a very big scale), farming doesn't pay. Especially not in Thailand. This may be the reason that at least 1 family member works as a hotel-receptionist in Pattaya. And that's the way it is and will not change in the near future. No offense. Cheers . The village I'm in is typical I suppose, farming rice is primarily for food supply. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dario Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 I'm not in Issan but just a few kilometers away. The attachment is a picture of my new Limo that I bought in the US and had it dis-assembled, containerized and shipped here, all 117 parts. I just finished assembling it and it has started its job of harvesting corn. As far as cattle is concerned the Thais around me buy them,breed them, raise them and sell them the same way that we did in the US.. And the reason that they do it is for one, and only one reason, MONEY! They don't eat a lot of beef locally but they do raise and sell them. Very impressive to see this kind of machine in Thailand! Must have cost you quite a lot to buy it, have it dis-assembled, containerized, shipped, released from the customs in BKK and brought to where you use it. I ever visited the John Deer factory in Davenport back in 1975. I just wonder if it is worth your investment. We bought a Thai Sengyont rice harvester 2 years ago and I must say it is really worth the investment. Where I live we can harvest twice a year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GinBoy2 Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Yes, I was a bit surprised at the nonsense of many of the answers on that thread. It sort of developed into a Thai bashing thread without coming out into the daylight as such. I should think that relatively few TV members actually live on a farm even in Isaan and that even fewer have a farming background. Suppose if it wasn't for nonsense TV wouldn't be as entertaining to read. Thai Visa should carry a disclaimer..'For Entertainment Purposes Only' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wayned Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 I'm not in Issan but just a few kilometers away. The attachment is a picture of my new Limo that I bought in the US and had it dis-assembled, containerized and shipped here, all 117 parts. I just finished assembling it and it has started its job of harvesting corn. As far as cattle is concerned the Thais around me buy them,breed them, raise them and sell them the same way that we did in the US.. And the reason that they do it is for one, and only one reason, MONEY! They don't eat a lot of beef locally but they do raise and sell them. Very impressive to see this kind of machine in Thailand! Must have cost you quite a lot to buy it, have it dis-assembled, containerized, shipped, released from the customs in BKK and brought to where you use it. I ever visited the John Deer factory in Davenport back in 1975. I just wonder if it is worth your investment. We bought a Thai Sengyont rice harvester 2 years ago and I must say it is really worth the investment. Where I live we can harvest twice a year. Actually we have three combines, a JD4435 and a JD9500 both purchased complete here and the one pictured, a JD 6620. The markup on the combines purchased here is very high and the savings on the import was 40-50%. Unfortunately the 4435 is a maintenance nightmare and parts are expensive with long lead times. The 9500 is big and cannot be used in some areas due to limited access through small village roads. The 6620 is smaller and has been modified to have a narrow horizontal profile. We not only harvest our own crops but sell the service to other farmers. Will we ever recover our ROI? Probably not in my lifetime. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cooked Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 Yes, I was a bit surprised at the nonsense of many of the answers on that thread. It sort of developed into a Thai bashing thread without coming out into the daylight as such. I should think that relatively few TV members actually live on a farm even in Isaan and that even fewer have a farming background. Suppose if it wasn't for nonsense TV wouldn't be as entertaining to read. Thai Visa should carry a disclaimer..'For Entertainment Purposes Only' Most of the remarks were predictable and not particularly funny. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zyphodb Posted August 19, 2014 Share Posted August 19, 2014 I live in a small village in Isaan, Come from a small town in Somerset, land of Cider so am certainly not a City slicker, can't imagine many of them living here for any length of time, a couple I know in the surrounding area are very depressed & hate it. I like living in the sticks as more than a week or so in a large town or city depresses me, I like people in small manageable quantities not en masse.... 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post GinBoy2 Posted August 21, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted August 21, 2014 (edited) I'm not really sure that the premise of the question is correct. City vs Rural. Very few places in Isaan are that far away from a large city, so the idea that you can be marooned in some rice field that requires trekking 10 days to the nearest mall doesn't really cut it. What I do think however is the people who tend to do best in isaan are the one's who often tend to be loners, be it city loners or rural loners. This isn't Jomstenski, Phuket or Bangkok, you're not going to walk into town and find bars thronging with farangs. Which seems to suggest to those who do live in those places that everyone here is depressed and condemned to a life, in what for them, would be a living Hell. It's just many of us don't have that need to be 'amongst our own' all the time. There are absolutely the folks who build a house here, sight unseen, buy a rice farm (foolishly thinking it will support them), move here and feel like slashing their wrists within a couple of months. But then again every time I'm forced to go visit my sister in law in Pattaya I see a whole lot more miserable looking farangs propping up a bar 24x7...drowning their sorrows for all those failed bars/restaurants/massage parlors/jet ski rentals/motorbike rentals...I could go on, that they thought were going to make them billionaires LOL Edited August 21, 2014 by GinBoy2 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SlyAnimal Posted August 21, 2014 Share Posted August 21, 2014 I was raised on a farm, closest neighbour was almost 1km away, next closest we needed the binoculars to see their house on a far hillside. Rural Isaan is urban compared to that lol, although I don't live on a farm here, or even in a village, we're in an Amphur as neither my wife or I are interested in personally farming. I might finance and manage a farm at some point (if it looks like a profitable investment), but considering the cost of Thai labour compared to the cost of my labour, I see no reason at all for me to ever get my hands dirty lol. Oh and I love living in Isaan, I'm in Bkk now doing some study but would love to be back in Isaan (which is my intention once I finish studying). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
krisb Posted August 22, 2014 Share Posted August 22, 2014 I only holiday in the village and live in a city in Australia, so from that pov, I get to about week 2, or day 10, and the cabin fever sets in. The neighbours love me cause,they make a small fortune from empty beer cans. I think I could live in a small city, but not fulltime in an Issan village. Suppose maybe it's my age, Im 39, I just get so damn bored, and it kind of ruins my holiday to be honest. I respect the guys that live there. Having a nice house would help, and I think you would need a hobby or farm or whatever to keep sane. Learning the language would be very important also. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SilverBeast Posted August 22, 2014 Share Posted August 22, 2014 What Cattle Thread? I should go read the entertainment contained therein...Wayned looks like he's got a good setup with some mechanized farming equipment.I'm technically from the city now but I'm about as close to growing up on a farm as you could get without actually having grown up on a farm. I was raised in Small town Saskatchewan and my parents on both sides all farmed and raised cattle.From what I saw on my visits the cattle were pretty substandard and need of something to raise the quality of the beef... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Surin13 Posted August 22, 2014 Share Posted August 22, 2014 Country born and bred, raised on a 2000ha cattle/sheep farm with a bit of cropping. Nearest neighbour was about 7kms away. More then half my family are still farmers or involved in farming in Australia, my sister has a 22,000 ha farm that is mainly cropping. My time is split between a farm in Isaan and a 300ha farm in Australia. In Isaan I don't live in a village, but out on the farm, wouldn't live in a city or town if I had a choice. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nev Posted August 23, 2014 Share Posted August 23, 2014 I live on 5 rai here in Khonkaen in the village and the wife has around 100 rai farming land and has been a farmer for the last 12 years since her father died on the farm and took over the business, so the last few years i have been learning about farming and enjoying the freedom of having space to move and the land to do what i want on, i have spent the last year renovating the main old house on the farm and it is looking fantastic and will move in next week after living 1 year in a converted workers house. Life is grand and only 20 ks into Khonkaen for all that we need and nights out with other farang's. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GinBoy2 Posted August 23, 2014 Share Posted August 23, 2014 Most Farangs living in the sticks have "Family-Ties". That's nice. Without this, on their own, they would cry out "what am I doing in such a place" and hop on the the next bus back to BKK. The Farang developing into a Farmer is based on the thinking that the land that surrounds the big house must be put to good use to eventually bring back some of the capital outlays associated with the cost of the big house. City slicker or not. Farang will eventually realize that (unless on a very big scale), farming doesn't pay. Especially not in Thailand. This may be the reason that at least 1 family member works as a hotel-receptionist in Pattaya. And that's the way it is and will not change in the near future. No offense. Cheers . On the question of scale, I have to agree with you. I have been around agriculture all my life and, size matters! What characterizes most isaan farms is they are small, and tend to be subsistence farming. Thats the real error many make. Wifey say's buy a few rai of rice paddy and we're in clover, so to speak, won't cut it. If as a farang 'if' you could but several hundred rai of land and farm commercially you might make it pay, but even then it tough. It's part of that culture gap I think. For a Thai just being able to provide enough rice to sustain the family for a year, with a little cash left over is good enough, for a farang it's just not a profit generating business to sustain the lifestyle you probably want 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thehelmsman Posted August 23, 2014 Author Share Posted August 23, 2014 I was raised on a small dairy and worked a large dairy thru high school. My lady has enough land to provide rice for eating for the year. Always a fresh pot of sticky rice everyday and a large cooker of steamed rice. She has more land she lets family farm for free. By the time you pay the labor to plant and harvest, there's no money. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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