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I've taken a few photos of my fig trees (see previous photos above). Now the plants seem to be doing much better than before. They're in a place that protects them from the full force of the sun at midday, but they get plenty of sun in the morning and late afternoon.

As can be seen, there are markedly more and healthier looking leaves this time. Unfortunately, the smallest plant - Ficus cariea Japan - didn't make it.

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Very happy cukes, bitter gourd (mara), lime tree in background, various herbs and flowers

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Long green beans (tua fuk yaow), lumyai, and plants from picture above in background

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Very happy tua fuk yaow

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5 foot basil shrubs, various flowing plants (some eatible <foreground>), tumeric (upper-right background behind basil)

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Very happy lumyai tree (logan), various herbs and flowering plants, ginger, and kha

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Ginger, kha, herbs

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Raised (thai-style) bed with clintro, lettuces, corn, and various fruit trees including chompu (rose apple), farang (guava), and aloe vera.

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Lumyai (logan)
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Ginger, lime tree, kefir, coconut tree, banana tree, and lemon grass

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And of course a happy banana tree

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Great photos! Thanks for sharing.

My yard long beans aka tua fuk yaow are covered in tiny bugs (which in turn attract ants). Yours don't seem to have any. Do you spray your plants and if so, with what?

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  • 2 months later...
On Wednesday, August 17, 2016 at 3:38 PM, pigeonjake said:

just a couple of pics to show we have got the hang of growing carrots now also our pashion fruit growing well and the sun flower seeds i brought back from england

 

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On Wednesday, August 17, 2016 at 3:38 PM, pigeonjake said:

just a couple of pics to show we have got the hang of growing carrots now also our pashion fruit growing well and the sun flower seeds i brought back from england

 

carrots.jpg

pasion fruit.jpg

sun flower 2.jpg

sun flowers.jpg

 

Hi Jake. Great photos. 

You say you've gotten "the hang of growing carrots" here. Would you mind giving me some advice on growing them in Thailand? 

All my attempts sofar have been in vain. I now grow them in a mix of peat, coir and rice husks in big plastic pots. Not ideal, but this seems to be working. I have no idea what the problem was last year but I assumed the ground was too hard for the roots to grow. 

Any advice you can give will be much appreciated. 

 

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Thanks. I hadn't thought of adding sand. I suppose a good helping of rice husks would also help to keep the soil loose. 

I'll try that when I get back home. 

At the moment this is my set up... not great, it's working. 

 

 

 

 

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  • 8 months later...

A few new photos to help keep this thread alive. 

 

The figs are coming along well. As somebody else on the farming forum has already mentioned, it takes the rainy season to really get figs to grow. 

 

 

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Which fig does the best in Thailand? I ate a few so far (bought from shops or markets) but they were far from great like the Greek ones can be.

But i've seen 20-30 different varieties of figtree's for sale so which ones are your favorits to grow in thailand?

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