“How long does it take to get to the school?” I asked Khru Apichart who had just turned off a minor road into an even more minor road.  “About 45 minutes,” he replied.  Then, with a twinkle in his brown eyes, he added: “Twenty minutes when I don’t have passengers!”

He was very proud of his new four-wheel drive utility vehicle, which was carrying us relatively smoothly over potentially bone-breaking potholes, up impossible inclines, and around dizzying single-lane curves. The patchy combination of concrete and packed dirt was too much for the van which had driven us into the Mae Sariang area of Mae Hong Son, so our official driver had lengthy breaks while we crossed all types of terrain to reach schools in remote hill villages.

Brown Water Buffalo and Baby

Thai Countryside: Water Buffalo in the Fields with their Calves

It was day two of a three day trip into the hills of Mae Hong Son to visit various school building projects managed by THEP (Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects) and to interview students who, without the benefit of modest scholarships, won’t be able to continue their studies.  I’ve talked about this collection of projects before, after my first visit, in my posts of mid- and late-November last year.

On the first day of this trip, we visited the new dorm that had been officially opened at Ban Mae Na Chang Nuea (you won’t find that on many maps!) on our last trip. Seven boys, ranging from age seven through to fifteen, were there to show us around. The other twelve-odd dormitory residents had returned to their families in even-more-distant and inaccessible villages for the weekend.

Canvas Shoes on Blue Tiles

School Shoes in the Bathroom

Squat toilet with blue water pail

Dormitory Toilet

Portrait: Karen boy

Looking Like a Little Angel : Young (Age Seven) Dorm Resident

We were re-visiting this school because the dormitory still had no furniture: no beds or cupboards and very little bedding.  The school principal was there, with costings in hand, to see if Susan Race, the THEP originator and manager, could find the necessary funding. They nutted out the details and we ate a full and delicious ‘pre-dinner’, knowing we were expected at another school for our main meal. But you can’t say no to food!  Nor can you say no to a late afternoon dance performance, when the girls have been so excited that they put their make-up on in the morning, only to have it melt off their faces in the heat of the day.

Four Karen Children in t-shirts and traditional dress

Our Keen Karen Dance Performers: In Traditional Woven Fabrics and a Liverpool T-Shirt (With Some Remaining Make-up), Ban Mae Na Chang Nuea

Group Portrait: Hmong Children

Hmong Children in the Neighbouring School Yard at Twilight, Huay Pheung Mai

These trips are about the children – and their ability to continue their educations against the odds. And it is the children that make these trips such a joy! Smiling, curious, making fun out of practically nothing, they seem to be thriving under very difficult conditions.

Once we reached our final destination for that day, we were treated to more food, more dancing, and a ceremonial opening of the canteen we had watched being built on our last visit.

Portrait: Karen Girls in Traditional Head-Dress

Karen Girls Ready for Church: This Karen Village is Mostly Christian

Portrait: Karen Boys in Traditional Tunics

Sunday Best: Karen Boys in Traditional Tunics

Formal group with a symbolic styrofoam key

Formal Passing of the Key: From Susan Race, THEP, to the Village Head Man, to the School Principal, to the Head Teacher, to a Student… Mae Tho School

We went on, in Khru Apichart’s new truck, to visit two more schools, where we were entertained by singing children and fed more food.  More importantly, other canteen and dormitory projects were reviewed and students looking for scholarships were interviewed.

Children Playing in the Dam, Mae Lit

Kids in the Dam, Mae Lit

Boys sitting in a dusty rural roadway, Mae Lit

Impromptu Grouping: Boys in the Road, Mae Lit

Mae Lit School

Khru Apichart’s Lovely Mae Lit School

Young girl with a hula-hoop

A local Five Year Old, Showing Off in the Kindergarten Classroom, Mae Lit

Terraced vegetable fields

View from the Mae Lit Canteen Window: Cabbages, Beans and Tomatoes…

Girl Sitting on a Bed

Girl’s Dorm, Mae Lit School, Complete with Mosquito Netting Canopy

Rustic Metal Bunk Beds

Eighteen Boys to a Room: Six in the Bunks You Can See in the Back Corner, Mae Lit

Bicycle tyre staircase

Nothing Gets Wasted: Bicycle Tyre Staircase: Om Pai School

Kids in School Uniform o a Dirt Stairway

Heading up to Class, Om Pai School

Metal and concret shed canteen building

Checking Out the ANZWG (Australian New Zealand Women’s Group) Canteen

Metal Gate

ANZWG-Funded Canteen, Mae Lit School

Children in a Classroom

Grade Five GIrls, Mae Lit School

Portrait: Thai Man and Woman

Khru Apichart and his Wife, Khru Usa. Both Work Full Time – Not Just at their Schools, but Liaising for Projects and Advocating for Students and Schools in their Area.

Susan does these trips two or three times a year, and you have to admire her for it!  They are not particularly comfortable: the van has seen better days, and the roads, even the better roads, challenge it fully.  Accommodation is often on floors: on this trip we slept on mattresses on the floor: one night in teacher housing, and another night in ‘cottages’ on one of the King’s agricultural projects. But, the food is great, scenery is beautiful, and the people are warm and welcoming. Most importantly, they so clearly need what little we can bring them, and are very happy to receive it.

When I got home and was talking to my husband, he asked, “Why doesn’t the government provide these things?”

Why, indeed!

Here’s hoping we can all do better for the children of the future.

Happy Travels!

  • Gabe - March 3, 2011 - 5:13 pm

    Thought provocing and admiration for the enthusiasm of the children to continue their education. GreatReplyCancel

    • Ursula - March 4, 2011 - 6:51 am

      Greetings and thanks to my two most loyal fans!
      You’ll be glad to know, Signe, that some private schools in Australia bring their kids to these areas regularly. Hopefully, these children will develop a social conscience. Certainly, the gaps do not seem to be narrowing!ReplyCancel

  • Signe Westerberg - March 3, 2011 - 10:13 pm

    I’ve driven to work today listening to the bickering and lambasting of the new My Schools Website…to come and see these happy children who have so little while we here whinge and whine when we have so much is moving and somewhat humbling. I love that you share these experiences with us and appreciate the magic that is throughout the world… only a bumpy road awayReplyCancel

  • […] I’ve been on these trips before (see: Budding Potentials, Building Futures, and Schools), and what always impresses me – other than the beauty of the countryside – is the […]ReplyCancel

  • Robert Louthan - July 19, 2018 - 12:17 pm

    Hello,
    My name is Robert Louthan, an artist and teacher from San Francisco, California USA. I am currently traveling through Thailand, and today I arrive in beautiful Pai. Planning to be in this region for the next 2-3 weeks, explore the surrounding beauty of Mae Hong Son and beyond.

    Carrying paint and materials with me, I would like to work with youth in the region and guide art projects. Very open and flexible, single day art workshop for 1-2 hours, or, guiding the youth through painting their own wall mural. This can be a 2-3 day project. Allowing time each day to let the kids paint.

    I have much experience doing this, and come here to Thailand with the intention of volunteering my time for free. Art and creativity so important for the youth, I am here to help them play, express, and create. Teaching collaboration and teamwork towards achieving a goal is also a powerful aspect to this type of inspired project.

    Look forward to hearing from you and possibly connecting with anyone you are networked to in the region that may assist with manifesting a potential art project that is in service to the community!

    Any leads, connections to communities, or schools you have in mind are much appreciated!

    With Love,
    Robert Louthan

    You may view some personal work on my website to get an idea of my inspiration for color and imagination.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - July 20, 2018 - 1:49 am

      Hi Robert,
      Thanks for your visit to my site. I’m sure lots of schools would be interested in what you do, but it is often difficult to fit short-term projects into full school programs.
      My THEP contact is not in Thailand at the moment, and is focussed on projects and scholarships. One of the teachers involved in THEP is now in a school in Chiang Mai, I think. Her English is reasonably good, and you might like to contact her through Facebook Messenger: https://www.facebook.com/krusa.inta
      Good luck!ReplyCancel

Luxurious resort accommodation in developing countries offers up some interesting dilemmas.  On the one hand, development for tourism brings money and job opportunities into otherwise under-developed communities.  On the other hand, it highlights the contrasts between the have-very-littles and the have-a-lots.

Bintan Resort ferry boat through grill

Through the Grill ~ View to the Other Side

The Bintan Resorts complex, on the north coast of Bintan (Negeri Segantang Lada), the largest of Indonesia’s Riau Islands, is a prime example of this dilemma. Part of a larger Indonesia-Singapore cooperation development plan including resorts, industrial parks, and water projects, it is, in effect, a Singapore-consortium-funded leisure space for Singaporeans.  Although the resorts attract tourists from many countries (there were Chinese, French, Koreans, and others in the queue for visas-on-arrival when we landed), Singaporeans represent the largest proportion of visitors (almost 30% in 2009). Access is via a 45 minute trip across the South China Sea from Singapore’s Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal in catamarans operated by the resorts themselves.

Ship on the South China Sea, Singapore skyline distant

Big Boat Looming against the Singapore Skyline on the South China Sea

Portrait: Indonesian man

Warm Smile ~ Indonesian Ferry Worker

This oversized gated community (3000 hectares) is currently home to 12 resorts, four signature-designer golf courses, several spas and countless manufactured attractions including go-karts, ATVs, paintball, and jet-skis. You get the idea.

Staff are everywhere; smiling, attentive, and exceptionally well-trained – as they should be at the prices being charged!  Although part of Indonesia, the preferred currencies here are Singapore or American dollars.  This is understandable: when you are paying $4.50 for a cup of tea, the equivalent Indonesian rupiah (IDR), at over 9000 to the US dollar, would constitute a rather large pile.  The average Indonesian income is $4,300 per annum – or less than three cups of over-priced tea per day.

Grounds and Pool, Angsana Resort and Spa, Bintan

Overcast Winter-Monsoon Weather at the Angsana Resort and Spa, Bintan

Lotus pond on the Greg Norman Laguna Golf Course, Bintan

Wind in the Winter Palms, Greg Norman Golf Course, Laguna Bintan

The official story is that a 1990 Presidential Decree (25 July 1990), set up the Riao Province Development coordinating team with the mandate to plan and develop projects within the framework of the Indonesia-Singapore cooperation agreement. The outcome, after massive consortium investment, is a good east-west arterial road system and drinkable water across parts of the island.  The resorts have  their own infrastructure to manage electricity generation and sewage treatment.

The unofficial story, as I understood it, sounded more like under-priced expropriation. The area designated as “Bintan Resorts” was previously mostly home to simple fishing villages, some of which still exist within the resort confines.  Unlike the hotel complexes, they have only recently been wired for electricity, which is only provided a few hours daily. These villagers supplement their income by sorting through the tonnes of rubbish that washes up from the shipping lanes of the China Sea and recycling anything of value.  Rubbish of no value seems to sit where it lands.

Wooden house with shutters, Bintan

Simple Housing ~ Fishing Village inside the Bintan Resorts

Fish drying outside on a stick

Drying Fish Outside

Baby inside doorway of a simple wooden house

Baby Inside

Rustic Pier at Low Tide, Fishing Village, Bintan

Low Tide, Fishing Village, Bintan Resorts

Wooden boat on blocks

Boat ~ Off Season

The Bintan Resorts development stands in stark contrast to the world outside its barbed-wire perimeter. Screening at the ferry terminal matches that of any international airport. There is only one road into the area from the south of Bintan, and this is complete with a guard house and two checkpoints, a good fifteen minute drive from the resorts themselves. According to company literature, stepped-up security was a response to the hotel bombings in Jakarta in July 2009, but it feels a bit isolating.

Once outside the enclave, life is more down-to earth.  Most locals use motorcycles for transport, and with only two formal gas stations on the island, ad-hoc suppliers use bottled petrol and funnels. There is fruit on the trees and fish amongst the mangroves. “Eco tourism” involves a visit to pandanus weavers, an unsophisticated rubber plantation, and a simple smithy.  It was a Sunday when we toured, so workers were mostly at rest.  We drank fresh coconut milk while locals walked the mudflats in the low light of the late afternoon looking for crabs, or performed Bahasa Indonesian karaoke songs in grass shelters along the beach.

Filling the Car : Plastic bottle and plastic funnel

Filling the Car for Our Tour

Children playing marbles on packed dirt

Kids in the Courtyard Playing Marbles ~ Kampung Sri Bintan

Old Indonesian man sitting outdoors

Old Uncle in the Back Yard

Shanty Out House

"Out House" ~ Ground-Well Housing

Black Chickens

Black Chickens

Wooden Blacksmith

Blacksmith's Forms, Sekuning, Bintan

Rubber Trees

Rubber Trees

Rubber dripping into half beer can

Catching Rubber in a Beer Can

Hand-operated Rubber Roller

Rubber Roller

Close-up: Rolled Rubber with bubble imprint

Rolled Rubber

Close-up: Pineapple plant

Pink Pineapple in the Garden

Wooden fishing Boat on Mud Flats, Bintan Indonesia

Boat on the Mud Flats, Sebung Pereh, Bintan

Sea kayak on beach at low tide

Late Afternoon on Low Tide, Sebung Pereh

Casurinas on flat beach at low tide, Sebung Pereh, Bintan

Afternoon on Sebung Pereh Beach

Of course, the time always comes when we have to return to our own reality.  It seemed rather fitting to me that the smiling ferry worker who was on our boat to Bintan was the same one who tied our boat safely back to the Singapore terminal at the end of our stay.

Mann trowing ropes onto Dock ~ Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal, Singapore

Tying up on the Dock ~ Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal, Singapore

Wishing you Happy Travels ~ Text: Happy Travels

where ever you may be!

Portrait: Taliang woman and colourful cotton weaving (Laos)

Taliang Woman and Taliang Weaving

If you have very little to start with, it takes very little to make a big difference.

Attapeu province in the southernmost part of Laos provides access to the infamous Ho Chi Minh Trail and two National Diversity Conservation Areas – and very little else.  During the French administration it was a base for Nation Liberation and, as a consequence, was totally destroyed during the war against imperialism.  It is still relatively undeveloped and is home to at least 14 ethnic groups living in traditional communities.  As of 2003, the average income was less than $200 per head per annum.

Laos as a whole is still predominantly rural, with a high birth rate (3.22 children per woman; ranked 56th out of 223 countries, as reported in the CIA World Factbook, 2010) and a high infant mortality rate (61.19 deaths/1,000 live births; 35th in the world).  In remoter areas like Attapeu, these figures are likely to be higher, and the burden of care falls upon the women.  I mentioned last week how Khun Napat Sirisambhand, an enthusiastic Thai working with a small World Bank grant, was helping the Attapeu Lao Women’s Union support local cottage industries – in particular, basketry, pottery and weaving.

So it was that in January of this year (2011), Khun Napat took a number of members of the Thai Textile Society to visit the Taliang people of Ban Sivalai, to see how these village weavers have succeeded, in a small way at least, in turning their traditional cotton ‘belt-loom’ or ‘back-strap’ weaving into a cottage industry that produces something marketable in the twenty-first century, generating income for their community.

Woven cotton fabric - fish design

Taliang Cotton Fish

Lao Taliang woman reeling cotton.

Everyone Works: Granny Reeling while Orphaned Grandchild Sits Behind

Taliang Belt-Loom Weavers in Traditional Dress

Belt-Loom Weavers on the Porch

Old woman and young children at open wooden window: Laos

What are They Looking at?

Portrait: Lao Women

Support Worker from the Attapeu Lao Women's Union

Top view of a woman weaving with a back strap loom

Back Strap or Belt Loom Weaving

Hands Interweaving Red and Blue Cotton

Close Work

Pieces produced by Back-Strap or Belt-Loom weaving are limited by the width of the strap and the length of the weaver’s legs.  For traditional clothing, finished pieces were often sewn together. Khun Napat found Lao cottons to be of inferior grade for commercial purposes and so takes Thai cotton and Thai cotton-silk blends into Attapeu for the women to turn into colourful table-runners and place-settings for international sale.

Cream and Brown silk-cotton woven cloth: Lao

Traditional Patterns in New Textiles with Natural Dyes

Ban Sivilai Interior: Linoleum floor and bare walls

Inside the Community House

I watched a woman finish an olive green runner with white frogs patterned into it and couldn’t resist! She charged me 50,000 Kip – roughly US$6.20 – for something that had taken her a couple of days to make, and we both went away happy.

Olive Green and white Back-loom weaving

Olive Green and Mine!

Portrait: Taliang woman in shower cap

My Weaver ~ a 32 year old mother of two with a third child arriving shortly. I have no idea why she was wearing a shower cap!

Wooden Drum with cooking pots

Communal Kitchen ~ Ban Sivilai, Taliang Village, Laos

Red helmet in the bushes: Ban Sivilai, Laos

Still-Life Found : Ban Sivilai, Laos

Wooden home on stilts, under construction, Ban Sivilai, Laos

New Wooden Home, Under Construction, Ban Sivilai, Laos

Children playing in the dirt

Unusual toys: A Tin Can, a Lump of Dung and a Rock

Lao Taliang Children

Bits of Bread and a Bike

Portrait:  Baby with Bread

Taliang Baby with Bread

I watched the children playing in the dirt, as one hammered an aluminium can into submission and another pounded a plastic bag of cow dung with a rock.  I watched the determination with which all the children greeted the bits of bread rolls we had left over from our breakfast. Solemn and unsmiling.

Certainly, some of the women we met here have energy, intelligence and enthusiasm.  These are the ones who go outside the community to attend workshops to learn how to develop their methods and improve their products.  These are the ones who keep these marginalised communities moving forward.  Over time, small projects like this one have make a big difference.  I shake my head at what conditions must have been like some twelve years ago.

And I wonder at the work left to do…

  • Signe Westerberg - February 17, 2011 - 11:07 pm

    Amazing the simplicity in which they live, we have children here that more is not enough and yet these children sit and play contently with very, very little… amazing people, wonderful pictures and i agree what must it have been like before it this is how it is now…

    What an fabulous experience…

    love to you both… SigneReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 18, 2011 - 12:26 am

      Hey Signe! True, isn’t – we could all learn a thing or two about downsizing our ‘needs’. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Kevin Dowie - February 20, 2011 - 12:10 pm

    Interesting series of photos Ursula.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 20, 2011 - 12:23 pm

      Thanks for visiting Kevin! It was a bit hard to get an angle on the place… or in the place…ReplyCancel

  • […] reminded me how much I love Laos: the songs, dances and smiles of the people, the brilliant hand-woven fabrics, the colourful markets, the ethnic villages, the beautiful countryside… I’m less fond […]ReplyCancel

Portrait: Lawae Woman with Traditional Face Tattoos

Lawae Woman with Traditional Face Tattoos and Elephant Tusk Ear Plugs

Bong! Bong! Bong!

The sound of gongs reverberate in my head; deep, surprisingly melodic tones that almost transport me back to Bhutanese monasteries… But in this image there are no tall, ornately carved and painted wooden buildings; in fact we are outdoors on dusty ground, surrounded by dry trees, old people and children, with few buildings at all.

Lawae Elders Playing Gongs

Lawae Elders Welcome us with Gongs

Lawae Woman Playing a Gong

A Lawae Woman Beats a Gong while Others Sing and Clap

I’ve heard of writer’s block. What I had didn’t feel like a block – more like a maelstrom. Images, sentence fragments and half-formed ideas were swirling around my head at dizzying speed. I felt like I was caught in a twister; no – a dust storm.

It was late January, and I had just returned from Attapeu, one of the southern-most provinces in Laos.  I was supposed to be writing a nicely-structured one-thousand word photo essay about the textile weavers there. That may sound easy enough, but I had come home with an over-packed suitcase, hundreds of photos, dust in every pore of my body, impressions in every cell of my brain and no idea where to start. My thoughts were as jangled as my bones and nerves after four days of bouncing over the patchy tarmac highways and dusty dirt-pack backroads of southeastern Laos in a van as one of a group of nine individuals – individuals with experiences and dispositions as different as their own cultural backgrounds and nationalities. In fact, as diverse as those communities we were travelling to visit! It is so easy to forget that one of the joys (and challenges) of travel, especially in remoter regions, is the journey itself and the people one shares it with.

It always takes me a while to sort through and digest my impressions of a trip, especially one as rich with experience as this one had been. The journey we had embarked on was a Thai Textile Society trip, involving a one hour flight from Bangkok to Ubon Ratchatani in Northeastern Thailand and a 385 kilometre drive. This doesn’t sound like much, until you factor in nine personalities, assorted stops, and the vagaries of an overland border crossing at the small town of Chong Mek. I left my home before light and reached the hotel after dark, following what was an interesting but extremely long day.

Attapeu is not one of the more frequented tourist destinations in Laos. We were there principally because our group leader, Khun Napat Sirisambhand, has been working with the local women’s organization, the Attapeu Lao Women’s Union, for the last eleven years. With the initial support of a small World Bank grant, they are working together to help develop the quality and promote the marketing of indigenous crafts, in particular: basketry, pottery and weaving. I was there because it was an opportunity to travel ‘off-piste’ and because I see this sort of small community development project as a perfect way to support local self-determination. My travel companions were there to learn about the local weaving methods and to buy textiles.

Our first morning out, we travelled 45 kilometres south of Attapeu, much of it on dirt roads, to the small Lawae village of Pu Wong.  Laos is a relatively small country with a population of only about seven million people. In spite of this, according to official government documents there are 47 recognized ethnicities – with over 160 minor ethnic groups speaking 82 distinct living languages. Attapeu has only about 115,000 people, but they comprise of 14 ethnic groups, many of whom cross the southern borders into  neighbouring Cambodia.

Lawae in Attapeu Province, Laos, singing

Traditional Beads and Welcome Songs

Portrait: Lawae Woman

Elephant Ivory Ear Plugs and Beads

The Lawae (or Lavae, Brao or Brow, but not to be confused with the Lave or Lavi!) come from the Mon-Kmer language tradition.  Traditionally, the women have worn earring plugs made from elephant tusks, with the size determining social status, and have cut the middle of their front teeth and had their faces tattooed for beauty.  While these customs are dying out, the older women in the community we visited were living examples.  What is not dying out is the pipe: small tobacco pipes were an almost permanent fixture in the mouths of many of the women!  These villages have no weaving tradition; in the past, the Lawae have made clothing from tree bark fibre.  These days, they tend to opt for fabrics from the local markets.

The whole village turned out to greet us with those musical gongs, singing and dancing.  The dances, as is the case in most of the region, pay tribute to rice and its place in the cycle of life. Some of the songs were accompanied by what looked like a bamboo pole. It is quite amazing that comes out this simple length of bamboo when it is clapped with a cupped hand at one end by one person while someone else claps their hands rhythmically at the other end.

Singing Lawae Children. Laos

Singing Children

Lawae boy singing: girl clapping time

Singer and His Fan - He had a terrific voice, but what amazed me was his 'Mike Technique' in a village with no electricity!

Lawae Women with Pipe, Banging Large Bamboo Pipe

Playing the Pipes

Portrait: Lawae Woman with Pipe

Magic Smile!

Portrait: Lawae Teenage Girl

Looking to the Future

This community seems to comprise far more then the national average of 41% of population between newborn and 14 years… children were everywhere! Houses are simple bamboo structures with cooking and food preparation done out doors.  Although there was electricity nearby, it didn’t reach most of the homes, and of course, running water was a pipe dream. While we were there, the elders punctuated their pipe-tobacco smoking with drinking with straws from the communal rice wine pot.

Lawae Toddler on Young Teen

Hanging with His Sister

Portrait: Older Lawae Woman with Pipe

Smoking Gran ~ Notice the Tattoo Remnants and the Elongated Ear Lobes

Lawae Men Around a Large Pot of Rice Wine

Around the Rice Wine Pot

Lawae woman with rice-wine straw

Straw in the Rice Wine

Young Lawae Child with Older Woman

"Me and My Gran"

Lawae Women Squatting in the Dust

Just Chilling

Portrait: Lawae Woman Laughing

Smiles all Around ~ Notice the Filed Front Teeth on the Older Woman.

Elder Lawae Woman

Smiling Elder ~ This Woman was a Great Character and Clearly a Village Leader!

Lawae woman outdoors: preparing chicken for the pot

Open-Air Kitchen - Preparing Chicken for Dinner

Portrait: Lawae Child

Lawae Child at Home

Woven Lawae Grass Houses, Laos

Lawae Grass Homes, Pu Wong District Town

Red Dirt Road: Laos

It's a Long Way Home! Pu Wong District Town

Text: Happy Travels

So, I’ll keep the weavers for next week, and leave you in the mean time with the rich earthy smells of dust, tobacco and rice wine, and the sounds of gongs and laughter.

Happy Travels!

  • Signe Westerberg - February 11, 2011 - 2:47 am

    still think you should be compiling a book of your travels… these are amazing and mostly unheard of – fabulous as always and look forward to the next installment, certainly a pleasant diversion from electioneering ;-DReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 11, 2011 - 5:02 am

      Thanks, Signe! I’m impressed you had time to look in with your busy schedule. Council meetings sound like my idea of hell.
      If they come to my door with a book deal, I’ll let you know!ReplyCancel

  • Gabe - February 11, 2011 - 5:42 am
  • Anthea - February 11, 2011 - 6:22 am

    amazing! I love the writing and the photos 🙂 Well done!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 11, 2011 - 6:25 am

      Thanks, Anthea! You are very kind. I’m looking forward to your Som Tam story. 😉ReplyCancel

  • Gavin - February 11, 2011 - 6:16 pm

    Nice job! I think these are some of your most compelling images and make for a lovely set. Love the boy with the imaginary microphone and there are some really delightful portraits in this collection. Good on you.

    🙂ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 12, 2011 - 3:02 am

      Aren’t you sweet, Mr Gough. Cheers! 😀ReplyCancel

  • […] particular trip, to Attapeu and to the Lawae and Taliang villages in the region, was rich with cultural experiences. But, I find it is often […]ReplyCancel

  • […] reminded me how much I love Laos: the songs, dances and smiles of the people, the brilliant hand-woven fabrics, the colourful markets, the ethnic villages, the […]ReplyCancel

  • jeanneau - July 2, 2014 - 9:49 am

    very nice photos, here is the music that goes with it

    KINK GONG MUSIC CATALOGUE
    IS A COLLECTION OF ETHNIC MINORITY MUSIC YOU HAVE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD BEFORE : 142 CDs
    2 LP 12″ GONGS OF CAMBODIA & LAOS on TIGER GONG PARIS F 2013
    https://soundcloud.com/gongs-of-cambodia-laos

    best
    laurent jeanneauReplyCancel

Have you ever wondered where your salt comes from? No – I haven’t either!  Salt is one of those many things we tend to take for granted.

Piles of salt in the sunshine

Salt Pans, Samut Sakhon

In Thailand, most of the salt used comes from brine salt-farms, and the largest number of these brine salt farms are close to Bangkok, along Highway 35 in Samut Sakhorn.  We’ve driven past these large square fields that resemble rice patties – except for the obvious absence of rice – many times, and I’ve often commented that they’d be worth photographing, but we’ve always been in a hurry to get somewhere else.  This week, driving home from the delightful beach town of Hua Hin, we stopped for coffee at a petrol station right next to one of the many salt farms.  Well, the temptation was irresistible and I wandered into one of the all-but-vacant lots.

Lanscape: Salt Pans

Entry to the Salt Pans: Planks and Steps off the Highway

Large wooden roller at the salt pans, Samut Sakorn

Wooden Roller

Rolling machine at the salt pans, Samut Sakorn

Rolling Machine at the Salt Pans

Rakes and baskets at the salt pans, Samut Sakorn

Equipment and People at Rest

Wicker basket in water

Briny Wicker Basket

Wooden rake on salt pan

Like the Outdoor Ice-Rinks of my Childhood!

Close-up: Wooden Salt Rake

Tropical Zamboni?

It wasn’t long before people came out to chat to us.  I did my best to ask intelligent questions about the salt pans: “How long does it take to produce the salt?” “One month.” “This one,” I asked, pointing to the piles of salt, beautifully dotted around the paddock.  “Ready,” I was told.  “This one?” I indicated the the smooth surface with the wooden rake lying in it.  “ยัง – Not yet,” was the answer.  That just about exhausted my Thai for the day, so we had to satisfy ourselves with smiling a lot.  My companion looked at his watch: “Three-thirty!” he exclaimed, as if that was important.

Sure enough,  as if by magic, people appeared from everywhere and the salt pan which was ready became a hive of activity: men and women in socks, boots or bare feet, walked out to the piles and set to work.  For the most part, the women shovelled the salt into bamboo carry-baskets, and the men, balancing a basket at each end of a long carry pole, carried the salt back to the store room.

To make the salt, the prepared fields are flooded with sea water pumped in from the near-by Gulf of Thailand, dammed, and left to dry naturally in the sun. When the water has evaporated, the salt is piled and taken away to be cleaned and bagged for sale: on the roadside, in local shops and internationally.   According to a web-blog source (and I could find no other reliable data), Thailand produces a million tonnes of salt each year.  From what I saw, each pound is labour intensive!

Thai man and woman moving salt

Working in Concert

Thai man carrying baskets of salt

Moving Baskets 

Thai woman in a brine salt farm

A Moment’s Pause

Portrait: Thai woman smiling; hidden by her hat

That Thai Smile is Never Far Away!

Portrait: Thai Male Worker, Salt Pans

Working the Salt Fields

Portrait: Older Thai woman in a red sunhat

Elders Continue Working…

Thai woman raking salt

Raking Piles into Baskets

Close-up: Bare feet and salt basket

Salt Foot Scrub?

Landscape: Thai man levelling salt farm

Levelling the Salt with Nonchalance

Close-up: feet in mis-matched wet socks

Socks in the Salt

Nature

Salty Reflections

Close-up: Rubbish at the salt farms, Samut Sakhorn

Keeping the Salt Farms Tidy

Broken bag of salt on wooden planks

Somehow, Spilt Salt Seems More Serious when You See How Much Work Goes into Each Bag!

Road-side stand selling salt and fish.

Buy it From the Source! Salt and Salted Fish (ปลาสลิด) for Sale. The Woman is Waving her Hand to Ask Passers-By to Stop, While her Dog Sleeps in the Shade.

Food for thought when you next salt your eggs!  Happy Travels.Text: Happy Travels


  • Catherine - February 3, 2011 - 4:56 pm

    Wonderful pictures Ursula, thanks for sharing!ReplyCancel

  • Signe Westerberg - February 3, 2011 - 10:47 pm

    Hi guys,

    you are so right… we take salt for granted, I don’t ever recall wondering how we got it etc… makes my addiction even more profound lolReplyCancel

  • Mike - February 4, 2011 - 12:54 am

    Hi Ursula many thanks for the link to my photoblog. The stats came from a Bangkok Post article and Wikipedia, as you say they are difficult to come by.

    I have relatives in Samut Sakhon, so I usually stop near the farms if we are visiting.

    BTW did you know that production ceases during the rainy season(probably obvious why)?

    You have a very nice blog and I think the photos are great.

    Best wishes
    MikeReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 4, 2011 - 1:38 am

      Hi Mike! You obviously had more luck with Wiki than I did. I tried the Bangkok Post link, and they sent me to the front page. I thought your page was great – and daily!! My gosh, weekly is killing me! 😉 Oh well. And, yes, I know all about rainy season! 🙂

      Greetings Cathy and Signe! Nice to see you both. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Paul - September 14, 2011 - 9:09 am

    Hello Ursula, a wonderful set and comments. I travelled along this road from Hua Hin last year but I do not remember seeing the salt fields. But now I have seen these photos I may try and visit this area when I next visit Krung Thep.

    All the best

    Paul.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - September 14, 2011 - 9:52 am

      Thanks for visiting, Paul!
      We’ve driven past so many times – always in a hurry to somewhere else! This visit we were lucky – we stopped mid afternoon on our way back to Bangkok and wandered into the salt pans while it was quiet… not a soul around… Within half an hour, the place came to life, and everyone set to work! The workers were mostly happy to have me hanging around, which was nice. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • janice - March 25, 2012 - 2:32 am

    I was vacationing in thailand in january. I did see these salt fields on are way from Hua Hin to Pattaya. They were very interesting……ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - March 26, 2012 - 10:22 pm

      Hi Janice,
      Thanks for the vist! Thailand is full of interesting sights! 🙂ReplyCancel

  • […] Para conocer más acerca de la recolección de la sal marina visitar el fotoblog: Sal de Samut Sakhon, Tailandia https://www.ursulasweeklywanders.com/travel/salt-samut-sakhon-thailand/ (Inglés). […]ReplyCancel

  • Tan Beng Kiat - June 28, 2018 - 7:00 am

    Dear Sir ,

    I would like to know this salt manufacture company as I ‘m interested to buy direct form them . Contact No 0832933838 Khun Tan

    Thank You .

    Sincerely
    Khun TanReplyCancel

    • Ursula - June 28, 2018 - 7:16 am

      Dear Kh Tan,
      I’m afraid I have no idea how to find the companies involved! Good luck with your search.ReplyCancel

  • Hans-Joachim Engelhardt - October 17, 2018 - 8:46 pm

    Hello Ursula, for a long time I have been dealing with salt ponds or the production of white gold by solar evaporation. Now I found these beautiful shots of the salt mountains and the people doing their hard work on the salt fields. This impresses me a lot and also your photos, which captured everything. I send you best regards from autumn Germany and wish you a lot of fun with your photo projects.
    Hans-Joachim EngelhardtReplyCancel

    • Ursula - October 24, 2018 - 1:58 pm

      Hi Hans-Joachim!
      Thanks for your lovely greeting. I’m so sorry to be so slow in replying: I have been travelling in lands with no internet. Enjoy your autumn!ReplyCancel

  • Tallwahl - December 3, 2018 - 7:37 am

    Read the book “Salt”. It’s very interesting on the subject we all probably take from granted.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 3, 2018 - 11:43 am

      It is a fascinating subject, Tallwahl. 😀ReplyCancel

  • Anne - June 24, 2024 - 5:28 pm

    Just passby on our drive to Chumphon..
    Bought 1 packet as the lady mentioned is non ionised salt
    . 7ReplyCancel