ฟื้นระบบนิเวศป่าบึงน้ำจืดในลุ่มน้ำเจ้าพระยา: โมเดลชุมชนหลวงประสิทธิ์เพื่อการปรับตัวต่อภาวะโลกรวน

The Luang Prasit Community is restoring a long‑lost freshwater swamp forest in the Chao Phraya Basin through ecological landscape design, a nine‑layer agroforestry system, and satellite‑based carbon monitoring. This community‑led model strengthens biodiversity, improves water retention, and demonstrates a practical pathway for climate adaptation in Thailand’s lowland floodplain.

Decoding the Future of Plant Proteins from Winged Beans: Ep. 6/6 Healing Soil, Cutting Costs and Boosting Yields

Plant geneticists once doubted whether yams could be grown in clay soil like the lower central Chao Phraya basin. By naturally tilling and fertilising the soil, winged bean has delivered massive yields and slashed fertiliser costs. From these high-yield results to FoodInnovate’s organic seed donation in Lat Bua Luang Agricultural Office, we are proving that restoring soil health is the key to a sustainable, low-cost agricultural future.

Decoding the Future of Plant Proteins from Winged Beans: Ep. 5/6 The Nitrogen-Fixing Frontier in High-Integrity dMRV Sandbox

Winged bean is not only a high-protein crop, but also a natural solution for a low-carbon food system. By using its biological ability to "make its own fertiliser," it reduces harmful greenhouse gases and restores soil health. In our 8-hectare sandbox, we demonstrate that this simple plant can provide high-quality data for climate finance.

เชื่อมโยงชุมชนเมืองย่านอารีย์กับชุมชนเกษตรกรรมผ่านการเดินทางของอาหาร

From flooded rice fields to regenerative agroforestry, BTLLAgroforestry reconnects rural Ayutthaya with urban Ari through the journey of food. Ground2Gut links soil restoration, organic farming, and ancestral memory to city health. Each harvest carries not just nutrients—but stories, resilience, and the quiet power of place-based transformation.

Summarising soil and water restoration Phase 1 (2016-2019) at BTLLAgroforestry, Ayutthaya, Thailand

From acidic soil and uncertain rains, BTLLAgroforestry began restoring land in Ayutthaya through syntropic principles and weekend resilience. Phase 1 focused on soil cover, water retention, and ecosystem healing. With 4 hectares now thriving, the journey continues—bridging science, community, and care in the face of climate uncertainty.

เรื่องเล่าจากลาดบัวหลวงถึงหลวงประสิทธิ์นรกรรม

In Ayutthaya’s lowland fields, my grandfather turned retirement into regeneration—donating land, guiding farmers, and founding Luang Prasit Market. Seventy years later, I return to the same soil with my brother and his orchard. Our family’s journey continues: from horseback through forests since my grandfather's time to one-hour drives, still rooted in care and community.

My journey on becoming a farmer in permanent agriculture

In Ayutthaya’s reclaimed soil, I began farming with no background—just curiosity and care. Mangoes survived, herbs surprised me, and failures taught more than manuals. This journey in permanent agriculture isn’t about yield alone, but about listening to land, honouring time, and growing roots deeper than crops.

The journey begins @BTLLAgroforestry – from soil to human health

In 2016, BTLLAgroforestry began as a humble experiment in Ayutthaya—restoring soil, water, and dignity. From bioremediation to climate-resilient farming, we cultivated change from the ground up. Today, it’s more than a farm. It’s a living lab where ecology meets community, and food begins with care, not chemicals.