Part 1. Vocabulary
devastated |
[ dev-uh-stey-tid
] adj. - overwhelmed
or shocked, especially by profound loss, disappointment, humiliation, etc.: My heart goes
out to all those devastated families. |
fleet |
[ flēt ] n. - a large
group of ships, airplanes, trucks, etc., operated by a single company or
under the same ownership: He owns a
fleet of cabs. |
figured |
[ fig-yerd
] v. - think,
consider, or expect to be the case: “we figured
we'd grow vegetables on them” |
stalled |
[ stawld ] v. - stop or
cause to stop making progress: "his
career had stalled, hers took off" |
tarp |
[ tarp ] v. - a piece of
material (such as durable plastic or waterproofed canvas) used especially for
protecting exposed objects or areas: tarpaulin. “…plastic tarp
over a bamboo frame” |
Part 2. Comprehension questions
What effect has the restriction linked to the pandemic to
the taxi industry?
How did the Bangkok-based taxi company help the drivers?
What has Bangkok's taxi companies heavily depended on?
What has workers turned a Camry into?
What keeps the company and its workers afloat?
Part 3. Article reading
Restrictions linked to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic
have devastated the taxi industry in Thailand. Many drivers left big cities to
return to the villages they come from, so one Bangkok-based taxi company has
transformed its fleet of idle cars into a giant vegetable garden.
"This is our last option. We need to grow vegetables on
the roof of these taxis. We still have loans on some taxis, sometimes amounting
to [about $21,000], that we took out in 2019 or 2020. These cars are just
sitting here, so we figured we'd grow vegetables on them," explained
Thapakorn Assawalertkun, the man who helps run the vegetable-growing
Ratchaphruek Taxi Cooperative, in an interview with France 24.
Bangkok's taxi companies are heavily dependent on tourism,
and the industry stalled as restrictions kept travelers at home throughout most
of 2020. Some countries are gradually easing coronavirus-related travel bans,
but the recovery has been slow and many drivers left to find work elsewhere,
usually in the countryside. Assawalertkun said that the remaining employees all
contributed money to start the garden.
The taxi fleet in Bangkok primarily consists of
late-model Toyota sedans. Workers turned a Camry into a
garden by spreading a plastic tarp over a bamboo frame and placing it on a flat
panel, like the hood and the roof. Their crops include chili peppers,
eggplants, and zucchini. They're raising frogs as well; putting an old
tire on a tarp and filling it with water creates a makeshift aquarium that
frogs can develop in.
Vegetables grown and frogs raised by the taxi company will
be used to feed its employees. Assawalertkun hopes to sell the surplus to local
food markets to help keep his company and its workers afloat until tourism
resumes. In the meantime, the garden keeps everyone occupied.
Source: Ronan
Glon 9/26/2021,
https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/thai-taxi-company-turns-its-idle-cars-into-vegetable-gardens/