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Trees not only produce oxygen, they also bring a bright future for residents in a thriving community in the Central Plains. Demand for large and landscape-sized trees has improved the living conditions of more than households in the village. Many residents earn income by growing and selling mai khud lom — trees grown to a certain size and dug from the ground to be replanted in other places.
These trees provide instant shade once planted in their new homes. They also produce a handsome profit for the local community. At least stalls selling this type of tree line both sides of the main road leading to tambon Cha-om. The tree business is thriving, with large trucks going in and out of the community to transport the trees to distributors and retailers.
Information from the Cha-om tambon administration organisation shows the village has zero unemployment. People, even children and the elderly, earn money working at the tree farming nurseries where they are hired to sow seedlings, water plants and scatter coconut residue in tree planting areas. Saibua Pasak, a tree farmer who runs several tree stalls in tambon Cha-om, said local residents had a tough life 20 years ago.
Most households earned a living by planting cassava and being hired hands at sugarcane plantations at the time. Hardship and poverty forced young people to abandon the village and migrate to big cities, leaving elderly people and children behind.
Income from cassava planting was not enough to make ends meet, driving many villagers to borrow money from loan sharks to cover household expenses. Breadwinners in many families had to run away whenever debt collectors arrived at the village, recalled Mr Saibua, who recently received the Outstanding Farmers Award for his role in tree farming. Things changed in when Mechai Vidavaidya, chairman of the Population and Community Development Association PDA , a non-profit development organisation, arrived in the village to urge local residents to switch from cassava planting to farming trees to be supplied to landscaping businesses.