Farmer Life in Isan Village



Earlier hand harvesting was the only way in Isaan villages. Nowadays harvesting machines have become for great help. This machine is an old model and many people are still needed for manual work.

The big harvesting machine are already used in some villages and they have to be the thing of the future.

Many farmers do harvesting themselves with their families or friends and neighbours . After they have worked their fields, they go and help the neighbours to harvest.




House of Spirits

House of Spirits in Isan village

house of the spirits

The view inside of house

house of the spirits


pig head for spirits

After the offer women asks good luck from the spirits
village women

Buffalo

Earlier buffalos were very important for thai farmers in their work. Nowadays machines make same work buffalos before.

buffalo

Buffalo or ploughing machine?

Forty years ago, most villagers were against the ploughing machine and swore that the buffalo would never disappear from Thai villages. For 3000 years, it had been a part of rice farming, Thai culture, and it could not disappear unless Thai culture disappeared. However, events proved otherwise. The buffalo, as well as the zebu, have entirely disappeared from plains villages. The water buffalo is becoming an endangered species.

The buffalo was habituated to the existence that followed seasonal changes. In the dry season, buffalo were kept on the fields, grazing on rice stubble and grass growing on the dams. In the rainy season, when rice was growing, the buffalo had to be herded elsewhere, and it was work allocated to children. They had time for it, as there were no schools, and even later on, their school attendance was not considered to be important.

The buffalo is an undemanding animal, eating whatever nutrition was available in the environs of the village. In the dry season, the buffalo was satisfied with rice straw that would otherwise have been unused. Buffalo and zebu dung was used in seedbeds, fields and vegetable patches. Many of the informants pointed out that the buffalo fertilized the field even during ploughing, and in the water the dung was well mixed in the soil. Buffalo dung also harboured insects that were a local delicacy. By Matti Sarmela