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  • News & article

    Worthy of a name

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 04/12/2016

    » Piya Chalermglin, PhD, intrepid plant explorer and extraordinary researcher at the Thailand Institute of Scientific and Technological Research, recently retired. He spent 20 years of his career surveying the country's plant genetic resources, particularly Magnoliales, which includes the custard apple family Annonaceae and the magnolia family Magnoliaceae. In the process, he earned the distinction of having discovered 17 species new to science, joining the likes of famous botanist Carl Linnaeus and other plant explorers who immortalised their names by inspiring the names of some plants.

  • News & article

    Succulents are not totally cactus

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 03/07/2016

    » Plants are like fashion: They come and go. Years ago, cacti were all the rage. Some gardening enthusiasts grew nothing but cacti and succulents, and had the time of their lives grafting one species of cactus on another and showing off their creations at plant exhibitions and contests. Then, in the years and decades that followed other species of plants caught the fancy of growers, until the much loved cacti were all but forgotten.

  • News & article

    Time for cutbacks

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 29/05/2016

    » We have had thunderstorms and rain this month. Hopefully the summer heat will soon be a thing of the past as the rainy season starts.

  • News & article

    Raising a peep

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 29/11/2015

    » Grant Howlett is an Australian expatriate with a reasonable knowledge of things botanical in his home country. But when it comes to Asian plant life, “alas, I have lots to learn”, he wrote. “I did reside for many years in the tropics of northern Australia, and many plants there are also here, like the foxtail palm which is originally from Australia but now prolific here in Thailand, but when it comes to trees I am lost.”

  • News & article

    A prune with a view

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 04/10/2015

    » A friend of mine has a roadside tree in front of his house. It had become so dense that he could not see through it from his second-floor window. Last month he had it trimmed.

  • News & article

    Leave those trees alone

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 12/07/2015

    » I was on my way to fetch my grandson from school last week when I passed by workmen busy trimming tamarind trees along Si Ayutthaya Road outside the Chitralada Palace compound. As branches cut from the trees fell to the ground, other workers picked them up and loaded them onto a lorry. They were still busy working on that particular stretch of road when I passed them on the way back.

  • News & article

    Try hedging your bets

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 05/04/2015

    » Reader Poonsri Pupipat wrote to say that she lives in a very busy lane used as a shortcut by all types of vehicles from early morning to late at night. She planted rows of Polyathia longifolia var pandurata trees, known in Thai as asoke India, along both sides of her fence to alleviate noise and air pollution, but two died recently.

  • News & article

    A taste for fine vines

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 15/03/2015

    » For more than seven years Chris Kaye had a beautiful Rangoon creeper on a trellis in front of his house some 20km south of Pattaya. “It has done remarkably well, producing copious fragrant flowers with virtually no special care,” he wrote. “Watering relied only on rainfall. Over the last two months it has completely died for no obvious reason. I cannot see any insects or grubs that may have killed it.

  • News & article

    Awesome orchids

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 01/03/2015

    » As the orchid market behind Government House draws to a close today, let us take another look at some of the flowers whose beauty melted even a military strongman’s heart.

  • News & article

    Seeing the light

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 22/02/2015

    » Vichai Atichartakarn, MD, wrote to say that many of his potted plants have leaves with brown edges. The leaves then die. “What is the cause?” he asked. “Is it because of lack of certain nutrient(s), too much sunlight, insects or disease? How can we correct and prevent it?”

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