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A farmer plants rice in a paddy field on the outskirts of Hanoi at sunrise last month. Vietnam’s farmers have increasingly taken to planting in the dark amid record-high temperatures. Photo: AFP

Vietnam farmers beat the 37-degree heat – by planting rice in the dark

  • Another heatwave has descended on Vietnam, leaving exhausted farmers with little choice but to take to their waterlogged fields in the dead of night
  • They earn around US$40 per shift, working from 4pm to 9pm and again from 3am to 9am – while ‘the younger ones have all quit for less hard jobs’
Vietnam

It’s 3am and pitch black when rice farmer Tran Thi Lan heads into waterlogged fields on the outskirts of Hanoi to begin planting, desperate to finish before the day’s brutal heat arrives.

Planting in the dark has become a saviour for countless farmers in north and central Vietnam during increasingly hot summers as South and Southeast Asian nations battle record-high temperatures this year.

“It’s so hard to plant the rice when the strong sun is directly on my back and the warm water in the field splashes my face,” said Lan, 47.

Lan had managed a few days of daytime planting during a brief respite from the heat.

Farmers plant rice by headlamp light at nighttime on the outskirts of Hanoi, where daytime temperatures are forecast to exceed 37 degrees Celsius this month. Photo: AFP

But she switched to night work as another heatwave descended on northern Vietnam in early July, with forecasters predicting a long stretch where daily temperatures would exceed 37 degrees Celsius (98 degrees Fahrenheit).

“With not enough light, the planting might not be on a straight line,” Lan acknowledges, as she quickly buries some roots into a patch of paddy illuminated by her headlamp.

Like Lan, 62-year-old farmer Nguyen Hung Phuong will now work from 4pm to 9pm and again from 3am to 9am.

“With extremely high temperatures, it’s very uncomfortable and exhausting to work during daytime, although of course I can see more clearly,” Phuong said.

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Working at night made him “more productive and less distracted”, he said.

Night planting began a few years ago at Nguyen Thi Hanh’s farm.

“Our parents did not have headlamps. The weather was also not as hot,” 56-year-old Hanh said.

Night planting has its advantages for the rice, which Hahn said is sensitive to extremes in temperature.

We just need to keep going … The younger ones have all quit for less hard jobs
Tran Thi Lan, Vietnamese rice farmer

“It’s in fact much better because the water is cooler, and more suitable for the young plant”, Hanh said.

Day or night, farmers such as Lan and Phuong can earn up to US$40 a shift, a large sum in a country where labourers in rural areas normally earn around US$250 each month.

But the work is so tough that hardly anyone wants to do it, Lan said.

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“Planting in the dark takes much more time compared to during the day,” she said.

“But we just need to keep going,” Lan said, worrying that, in a few years, no one would be left to do this work.

“The younger ones have all quit for less hard jobs.”

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