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Bangkok Airways (www.bangkokair.com) just got the green light to become the first foreign carrier to fly to the Myanmar capital, Naypyitaw. Starting from this Sep 30, the airline will operate direct flights three days a week (Monday, Wednesday and Friday) from Suvarnabhumi Airport using its 70-seat ATR72 aircraft. Ticket prices haven’t been revealed yet, so you’ve still got time to research this still relatively new capital, which CNN has listed as one of the ten fast growing cities in the world. And in another sign of our near-neighbor growing prosperity, Bangkok Airways will also increase the frequency of its flights to Yangon from three daily to four, from Oct 27. 

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New concept fitness training center The Lab (3rd Floor RSU Tower, Corner of Sukhumvit 31, 02-662-1618, 08-4130-4001, http://tbtlab.com) together with the Mercy Centre Thailand is organizing a trek around the foot of Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain, all in the name of charity. The fund-raising activity is aimed at supporting the Bangna School and Eco Farm for Children project and will take place from Oct 13-28. Places need to be reserved by Sep 15 and the total cost of the 16-day trip is B60,000, covering international and domestic airfares, accommodation, meals, travel insurance and pre-trek training. The trip aims to raise a minimum of B25,000 per person. For more information, 085-270-7518 or http://tbtlab.com/ebc-trek     

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Samorn Imrot, 36, a ticket collector on bus no.156, was oblivious when a passenger took a video clip of her confronting a passenger who was complaining that the bus was running late. The clip, which has since gone viral, won her applause for her sense of humor when dealing with angry passengers. 

How did you become a bus ticket collector? 
I worked in an electrical factory before discovering my love for the service industry. I would watch my sister working as a bus ticket collector, and I decided it was something I wanted to do. So I applied to work at Bangkok Mass Transit Authority (BMTA) District 2 and I finally got the job. It’s been 11 years already.
 
How did you feel when you first found out about the clip?
I was shocked. My friend sent me the clip through Facebook and I thought the reception would be negative. But I’ve mostly heard positive comments about me. At first I felt good about it, but now I feel uncomfortable because often passengers get on the bus and stare at me like they’re waiting for me to say or do something. It makes me shy and uncomfortable.
 
Have you ever encountered any weird passengers?
Yes. Mostly perverts. There was one time that I noticed a guy trying to peek at one of the young girl students. I tried to stand in the guy’s line of sight. I walked up to the girl, and told her that someone was looking at her. Her mother and aunt were very happy that I warned them and cared for the girl. 
 
What have you learned dealing with different passengers?
You must put your duties first. I’ve learned to be patient yet to solve problems quickly. 
 
Tell us about your beauty tips on duty.
I only realized I was pretty when I got married. Colorful make-up makes me feel wonderful. I always notice that women passengers who wear make-up look better than those who don’t. I also love to put colorful accessories like bows or artificial flowers in my hair. I love red because I was born on a Sunday.
 
What’s your day like? 
I wake up early in the morning to clean my house and start getting dressed up at 10am to start work at noon. I spend one hour to get ready. I work with my husband every day because he’s a bus driver. I don’t like talking to him while working. I’d rather talk to the passengers. We finish work sometime in the evening depending on how bad the traffic is.
 
What’s the longest time you have been stuck in traffic?
Three hours. The craziest traffic is on Soi Ladprao 77. The thing that makes the traffic really bad is vehicles parking on the road, which often happens around crowded areas like markets with lots of food. 
 
What helps you get through your day?
The passengers. They always make my day. Seeing them smile when I speak is the happiest thing for me. Before the clip, a girl would ask me if I ever got tired because she always saw me talking to passengers. Everyone has problems, including me, but seeing happy passengers really relieves my stress.

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One of the most successful luk tung singers of recent times, Bao Wee, 39, was recently named Best Male Singer of 2013 by the Broadcaster and Journalist’s Assembly of Thailand [BJ.AT] and was the recipient of the government’s Luk Katanyu (devoted son) Award last month. Here, the man otherwise known as Air Force Master Sergeant Weerayut Nancha talks to BK about his long road to success and his passion for music, the military and football.  
 

I’ve achieved my dreams already. I had two dreams in life: to become a soldier and to be a singer.
 
I dreamed of wearing a military uniform since I was a kid. My dad was head of our village in Trang province, so soldiers and police often visited my house to discuss ways to counter the communist insurgents. The officers in uniforms looked so cool. I wanted to be like them.
 
I started singing when I was in high school. I traveled more than 30 kilometers every weekend to get to the studio where my seniors would play music.
 
I become the lead singer of my school band. It was the biggest thing that had ever happened to me. But my parents weren’t so thrilled. They didn’t want me to be a singer. They wanted me to be a civil servant.
 
Too much freedom can make you go wild. I couldn’t get into the army cadet schools so I switched to study at Ramkhamhaeng University. I failed eight out of nine subjects in my first year because I was always got drunk with my friends.
 
Being a soldier changed me completely. I was lucky that the next year I got accepted into the Royal Thai Air Force’s Air Technical Training School. Being a soldier helped me gain confidence and learn to take full responsibility for my actions.
 
Being asked to sing at a pub rekindled my childhood dream. I had stopped singing for a decade after graduating from high school. But my friends who owned a pub in Lop Buri, where I was stationed, insisted that I start singing there.
 
The Star singing contest was my turning point. I went to audition at the age of 30, which was the cut-off age. I  saw it as my last chance to realize my dream. But, I didn’t make the cut. I cried in front of the GMM people and caught a bus back to my base.
 
Failure can push you forward. I spoke to Khai from the band Marijuana who told me to produce my own songs instead of waiting for good luck.
 
I was in debt before becoming a sucess. I took out a huge loan from the army co-operative in order to make my first album. I gave my songs to Nu Meter [famous luk tung singer] in the hope that he would listen to them and get me a record deal but he just told me to send it to the label he was signed to, RSiam. They later signed me, and Nu Meter has since written songs for me too.
 
 
Success isn’t down to one person. I never attribute my success solely to myself. So many people around me have contributed to where I am today, especially my beloved army.
 
It took me 19 years to get a degree. I stopped studying when I became a soldier, but I never stopped thinking about getting a degree. I tried going back to study political science over and over at Ramkhamhaeng and finally made it happen in 2011.
 
I cried at my graduation. I still get emotional every time I talk about it. I fought hard to achieve it.
 
I’m neutral in politics. I have friends from every political strand, from yellow shirts to red shirts, including Nuttawut Saikue and Jatuporn Prompan. But I try to avoid going to any rallies because I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feeling. 
 
Politics is all about power. We are in this situation because politicians abuse their power, no matter what their party is.
 
Thais are divided. It’s dangerous. The head of each group should be aiming to unite not disrupt. It’s about sacrifice, honesty and telling the truth.
 
It’s sad to see the bloodshed in my Southern homeland. I don’t really know what’s happening, nor do lots of people there. I personally think the administrators have ignored the Muslim community for too long. The problem has become a cancer. I hope we can heal it one day.
 
I’m afraid of becoming a poor singer but I never do things just for the money. I’ll never forget the day I had only B20 in my pocket. It reminds me that I should help others whenever I can.
 
Football is my favorite thing in life. Any day where I play football during the day and sing at night is a perfect day. I played for Samut Prakan United FC two years ago. But now I am an assistant coach at Pathumthani FC.
 
I dream of owning a football team and a stadium to teach kids to play for free. I know I don’t have the musical knowledge to teach others, but I know tons about football. That would make me so happy.
 
Nepotism has made a mess of Thailand, and football is just like politics. There are so many talented people out there, but those who are in power will only look after their own. It’s terrible.
 
Family is a sensitive topic for me. I love my career and fans so much, I don’t know if I can leave them to start a family of my own.
 
You can forget about anyone except your parents. Though I am so proud that I just received the Luk Katanyu award, no matter what others think about you, your parents must be your top priority. You wouldn’t have today without them. 
 
 

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Singer Puttipong Sriwat, 37, aka Leo Put, took a 10-year break from the music business but heads back on stage on Aug 31 for the GMM Party Reunion concert. BK found out what he’s been up to, from becoming a father to his dreams of cycling around the world.

Becoming a singer was down to luck. A talent scout spotted me walking around Siam shopping for underwear just after I had moved back from Australia.

I don’t give a shit about those who judge people by their looks. I was judged by people at GMM because I wore scruffy sports clothes to our meeting. They were like, why the hell are you here? I was actually meeting executives, to discuss becoming a singer. I wasn’t quite sure but I finally said yes and released my first album in 1996.

Singing isn’t my favorite thing. I just happen to be able to do it. So I turned my back on it for a decade. Now I enjoy working behind the scenes doing jobs like narration and production. I also present a TV show, Por Nu Keng Tee Sud Nai Lok (My Dad is the Best in the World), on Channel 7.

The entertainment industry has a deceptive charm. The business makes those working in it swell with pride and think that they are cooler than everyone else. Those people who aren’t mentally strong might be led astray.

I grew bored of partying every day. I tried to prove that I was a cool guy by going to parties and show everyone that I was cool by being able to hold my alcohol. Laughing at the same shit every night finally wore me out. I just knew that I couldn’t be a bad boy.

Creating scandals or showing some flesh is such a low method of getting famous. Concentrate on doing your best at your job to be successful.

Watching TV and social networking stresses me out. It’s true that we’re in a world of information but it seems like there is no filter.

Seeing politician’s faces on posters and everywhere is really frustrating. It’s like they are taking credit for everything good in this country. The worst thing is people aren’t aware that it is a politician’s duty to work to get all these things for us. People think they owe them a debt of gratitude.

Don’t work for the future. You’re just suffering for things that society thinks are important like cars or houses. But remember, not everyone will live until they are 60. You might die tomorrow and have never really lived. Your life would be such a waste.

Live in the present. My goals are day to day goals. I just do things that I love to do and then try to make money from them.

I love sports. If I had discovered that I loved it earlier, I would definitely be a professional athlete. Sports is the fairest thing in life. You want to win? Go practice.

Riding bicycles is my meditation. Others might go to the temple but this is my way of clearing my mind. Seeing the views change along the way is more pleasurable than just sitting in a temple.

Experiences along the way are far more important than the destination. I love to take a long ride out of town and people always ask me how long it takes to get there. But time isn’t my concern. What happens along the way is all I care about.

Living in the city makes people hostile. Folk who live out of town are far friendlier. When I ride out of town I always meet people who ask me to join them for dinner or to stay at their place. So I’m not sure whose quality of life is better.

Having a baby taught me real love. Love between men and women is all about feelings. There are always mutual benefits. But the love parents give to babies is ideal love. You can’t have it with anyone but your children. He teaches me to live for others.

I’m not the best father in the world. I know I can’t protect him forever. I plan to teach him how to live properly in this world. For example, by encouraging him to get a part-time job to become aware of money.

Kids these days are idle. They think they know everything but they never try to do things. Searching on Google might give you information but you should learn by doing things, too.

Simplicity is best. My wife and I are so happy to live in the simplest way. I want my boy to grow up in this environment.

Virtue and morality are more important than education. It’s true that education matters but, in reality, not everyone can get the best education.

I like the mess and extremes of Thailand. The wires, the sidewalks, the bird shit, the noodle stalls are all amazing. But the most fascinating thing is how Thais learn to live with it all so easily.

I dream of cycling around the world. Taking the plane, you just pop-up at your destination. But cycling helps you experience the sea, the desert, the forest and all the people along the way.

Mix up your daily lifestyle to refresh yourself and broaden your mind. Take a walk instead of driving or stop and talk to a stranger. You will learn a lot.

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Is it easy to grow your food in the middle of the city? BK talks to those who have made their own city farms right here in Bangkok, on rooftops and in backyards.
 

Rooftop Farm

Lak Si’s rooftop garden

Narong Jongjamfah

- Lak Si District Office

How did the project start?
Eleven years ago, the staff at the Public Cleaning and Public Park sections of the district, started growing vegetables on an abandoned plot next to the district office. But when the landlord saw the vegetables, he claimed his land back. The section director at that time then told us, OK, you can grow your vegetables on the roof of the office. Then the ex-assistant director created a website about the whole process and it became this free public education thing.
Is it difficult?
You must prepare the rooftop first. The floor has to be absolutely watertight. You have to be motivated to eat good, safe food. As for the rest, just come here and we’ll teach you. It’s free. You can even organize a field trip for your company.
Why is farming in the city important?
Our country’s food safety is not very good. There are too many chemicals used in our food. Food is man’s first medicine, it’s what keeps you healthy. I think growing your own food will be increasingly embraced in the future. It’s sustainable. When there were big floods in 2011, our district was a shelter for flood victims. We could provide them with food and vegetables thanks to our rooftop garden. Farming in the city also helps our city be greener and cooler. It increases our quality of life.
Contact: 02-576-1393 www.bangkok.go.th/laksi


Lak Si District Learning Center Free Courses

- Rooftop or concrete garden techniques
- How to produce micro-organisms for vegetables
- How to produce manure
- How to produce fertilizers for vegetables
- How to grow bean sprouts
- How to grow seeds
- How to raise earthworms
- How to grow straw mushrooms in a basket


City Garden

Suneerat’s home

Suneerat Mathiim

- Home Farm

Why did you start your farm?
It’s a perk of doing my own magazine, Simply Living. I used to work so hard as a magazine writer. Closing an issue every 15 days was really exhausting. Stress finally made me sick. I couldn’t sleep at night, had headaches and suffered immune system problems. I started studying about living healthy by eating good food. It helps a lot. Starting Simply Living exposed me to more wellness research. Finally, I rented a house in Ladprao Soi 48 and transformed it into a little farm where I grow everything I want to eat.
How has it transformed your life?
Completely. I used to be an employee who spent most of her time working. Now I have time for myself, too. I wake up at 6am, take my kids to school, come back to do some gardening and then start my work as a freelance editor. I also have small coops with chickens and ducks so we can collect their eggs everyday. I don’t really need to go out from my home as I have all this food at my place. Sometimes, my neighbors also come to buy some produce such as eggs and vegetables. It’s organic and we sell it really cheap, like B5-B10 a piece. We also try to spread the word by holding workshops on growing in the city as well as recycling junk to create accessories. We are also planning on re-launching Simply Living as everything stopped due to the 2011 flood.
Why is growing your own food important to you?
Most people will only change their life if something drastic happens, such as  beign diagnosed with cancer. But why do you need to wait for problems in order to change? Choosing a healthy way of life is pleasant. Eating your homegrown vegetables is awesome and you will be so proud of what you create. It’s definitely a better feeling than eating expensive food anywhere else!
Contact: 082-520-0308 or Facebook: www.fb.com/simplyorganicsBKK


Green Leader

Raitong CSA box

Brian Hugill and Lalana Srikram

- Raithong Organics Farm

What is the goal of your CSA project, the Munching Box?
It’s a tool for converting more farmers to organic farming, and getting existing farmers to increase their organic acreage, as well as provide a stable and growing channel for suppliers. Obviously this is a bit different to how customers see it—a product in its own right—but these are mutually supportive views. We need customers to achieve our aims and customers want the Munching Box to get better and better.
What are your accomplishments regarding the Munching Box?
It is developing into a larger platform for the organic lifestyle. Our current retention rate for the CSA box is about 70-75%, depending on the season, which I believe is about average for such programs in the US. Up to July 11, 2013, we delivered 23 tons of seasonal organic fruit and vegetables. We do our best to source only local, high quality, artisanal products—using organic ingredients wherever possible and also working with suppliers to go green with their packaging.
What’s your plan in the next 5-10 years?
We’re working on improving the transparency of our value chain by building upon our rice planting/harvesting trips, hosting food events and giving lectures at schools. The next step will entail building up the agro-tourism side of things, developing a farmer-to-farmer, customer-to-farmer organic certification system, implementing random pesticide and nitrate testing, improving the nutrient density of our products, ramping up our involvement in urban agriculture (through the new BeeKK initiative, www.facebook.com/BeeKKUrbanBeekeeping) and so on. And in the longer run, we also hope to be able to expand to other locations in Thailand and ASEAN once we’re happy with our current model in Bangkok.
Contact: www.raitongorganicsfarm.com


Where to buy the good stuff

Lak Si’s basket

Raitong Organics Farm

Raitong (www.raitongorganicsfarm.com) is doing a community-supported agriculture (CSA) box under the name CSA Munching Box, which also comes with a few helpful recipes. Monthly subscription is B2,000 plus a weekly delivery charge starting from B60.

Health Me

Health Me is not only a good healthy restaurant, they also support farmers with their CSA Box (B4,200 for 12 baskets) sourced from provinces like Ang Thong. In front of Ratburana Soi 30, 086-332-8266. Open Mon-Sat 9am-5pm.

Saijai

Located in Vipawadee Soi 22, Saijai offers various activities for kids to learn about their vegetables and how to grow them, as well as food delivery with a changing menu depending on the produce they get from the farmers and their home garden. Vipawadee Soi 22 (behind St. John University), 087-915-3440. www.saijaihealthyfood.com


Urban Goat

Pasteurized milk

Piramit Paitayatat

- Goat Milk Farm

Why start a goat farm?
I love goats. I played with goats since I was a kid as my granddad raised some in our backyard. But then he stopped, and it’s so hard to find goat milk in the city. So five years ago, I started trying to find goat breeders in the Muslim communities around Bangkok. I found two goats to start with and now I have nine.
How much do you produce daily?
We can milk about 8-10 liters per day. After we milk the goat in the morning, we will steam it at 70-80 degrees Celsius to pasteurize it. We are a big family so we normally keep about five liters to consume. The surplus we sell to our neighbors who come to pick it up every day.
Is it hard to have farm animals in the city?
Yes. We have to pay more attention to cleanliness. Controlling the smell is the most important thing. We put EM [effective microorganisms] solutions in the dung to get rid of the smell. We also clean the goat before we milk them to get rid of their strong aroma, which can get in the milk, too. We then make sure the milk goes straight into a bottle. It reduces the milk’s contact with air as milk absorbs smells quickly.
Why go through all this effort?
It’s safer. Goat milk is full of nutritional value, more than cow milk, but it’s more expensive, too. Cow milk is B25-B40 per liter while goat milk is B70-B100. Kids allergic to cow milk can drink goat milk, too. I raised my two children with goat milk. I wouldn’t give it to my children if it wasn’t good for them. You don’t have to worry about food safety if you have your own farm.
Contact: Piramit 081-689-8061


Herbal Haven

Duangkamol’s garden

Duangkamol Vephula Waagensen

- English Herb Garden

What inspired your rooftop garden?
I like English-style herb gardens. I have so many vegetables and herbs like rosemary, holy basil and eggplants and you can always mix them with flowers to make the garden more colorful.
What’s the best thing about growing your own vegetables?
I get to create new dishes all the time, which nowadays I share on my Facebook page (www.facebook.com/praekitchen), too. The new recipes are dependent on our new produce; just recently, I did baked rice in grape leaf. It was fantastic, very aromatic. I never knew that grapes grew so easily. Our dog, Herky, also loves eating all the vegetables and herbs.
What’s your favorite easy-to-follow recipe?  
For a nice refreshing drink, I always pick out rose petals from the garden. You take two rose buds, 170 grams of lychees, one teaspoon of rose syrup and four pieces of peach. Mix them in the blender and you’re done.


DIY Farmer

Nakorn’s garden

Nakorn ‘Prince’ Limpakuptathavorn

- Thai City Farm

What got you started?
Even though I studied agriculture during my Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees, many of the classes taught us to use chemicals to grow vegetables. But there was a class about sustainable agriculture which sold me on the idea of being self-reliant. It’s good for our health and for the environment. I wanted to buy land out of town and grow food there but my family still lives in Bangkok, so I had do it another way.
What are the benefits?
It’s more than just the feeling of achieving something. It’s a journey where you meet new friends and a new community. The vegetables are definitely more delicious, sweeter and crispier. My mind is free when I’m in the garden. I grow so many vegetables that often I have to give them away to others—and that’s a source of joy.
What’s the most important thing about growing vegetables?
Everything matters. But what people might not is the importance of soil. Natural soil produces the most beautiful plants. It’s like in the jungle where everything grows and fertilizes itself.
What are the difficulties of vertical planting?
It gets very dry real quick. But if you have good water management, it will be fine. The important thing is to cover the soil with the leaves to maintain moisture and to protect the soil when you water them. Some plants love their soil a bit dry and it is fun observing the different conditions that different vegetables prefer.
Do you think Thai people still relate to the pak suan krua (literally “vegetables from garden to kitchen”) ideology?
This was more noticeable during the government of Plaek Phibunsongkhram when the economy was not at its best and people still had their own land. About 20 years ago, bio-organic consumption boomed along with Lemon Farm shops. As time goes by, we sometimes forget but, hopefully, places like the Lak Si District Office prove that we can still grow our food in limited spaces.
Contact: www.thaicityfarm.com


Health Boosters

Saijai

Charina ‘Aom’ Nguansamang

- Saijai Healthy Food

How did you start growing your own food?
My husband and I always thought we could control our lives before my husband found out he had cancer. The doctor said that there was no need to change his lifestyle, but we disagreed. We took issue with our food. Cutting out chemicals from your diet is easier said than done, so we started building networks among people who shared similar ideas and began to grow our own. We then started a food delivery service with produce from these farmers and from our own farm.
What are your tips for growing vegetables?
It’s about having a heart, to start with. There’s actually not much to learn. Just don’t expect too much and let nature do its job. The fun is ing experiencing it for yourself. If vegetables grow in their proper season, they will turn out beautifully. Also, grow vegetables that encourage you—for some, growing a whole cabbage, eating it and then having to start again is too much, so plant things like holy basil and watercress where you can grab a few leaves and let it grow on. For budding farmers, the best time to give planting a try is around the end of rainy season.
Why are you focusing on teaching children to grow vegetables?
We have courses for children as we think they can change their attitudes more easily than adults. I think that when kids learn, parents also learn. I think we can all change and lead more balanced lives.
What’s a good diet for those living in the city?
Eating what you grow brings you happiness but supporting the farmers who turn their back on chemicals is just as important. The money you pay for their food empowers them to work harder and stay on the right track.
Contact: www.saijaihealthyfood.com
 

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