Papaya in Thailand 🥭

If you’re anything like my wife and thought papaya grows somewhere low to the ground like a regular garden plant… well, I had the same surprise waiting for me.

Papaya doesn’t actually grow on a tree in the usual sense. It’s more like a tall, fast-growing plant that just pretends to be a palm.

  • a single straight trunk with no branches

  • leaves only at the very top

  • fruits growing directly from the trunk

  • usually around 2–5 meters tall, sometimes higher

It looks slightly unreal the first time you see it up close — like nature took a shortcut and didn’t bother with branches at all.


🌱 A Few Things You Might Not Know

  • technically, papaya is considered a giant herb, not a tree

  • it grows incredibly fast and can start producing fruit in 6–12 months

  • its lifespan is short — around 3–5 years

  • in Thailand, it grows everywhere — sometimes right in people’s yards

So yeah, it’s basically a “fake palm” with fruit stuck straight onto the trunk. Simple, efficient, and a bit weird.


Papaya is one of those fruits you start noticing everywhere in Thailand — markets, street stalls, kitchens… it’s just part of daily life here.

And what I didn’t expect at first — it’s not just about sweetness.

  • Green papaya — crunchy, fresh, almost neutral. This is what goes into som tam (that spicy Thai salad everyone talks about).

  • Ripe papaya — soft, juicy, deep orange, with a smooth and mellow sweetness.

Locals don’t treat it as something exotic at all. For them, it’s as normal as apples or potatoes.


More Than Just a Fruit

Papaya is also known for being easy on the body:

  • helps digestion (thanks to papain)

  • light and refreshing

  • perfect as a quick snack after a meal

You’ll often see it already peeled and packed in small bags with a stick — grab and go, no thinking needed.


A Small Discovery

This photo shows a field where papaya used to grow. Now it’s already cleared, and the trunks are stacked in neat piles — kind of strange to see how quickly everything changes here.

But the real reason I came here was different.

I wanted to see papaya flowers.

I had never seen them before, and honestly didn’t expect much… but they turned out surprisingly beautiful. Soft, slightly yellow, almost waxy-looking. And the unopened buds? Even better — they look delicate and oddly perfect.

Of course, I ended up taking way more shots than planned.

Now at least I know what papaya looks like before it becomes fruit.


Personal Note

At first, papaya might feel a bit too simple compared to flashy fruits like mango or durian.

But the longer you stay in Thailand, the more you start to appreciate it — not for being exotic, but for being constant.

It’s always there. Always fresh. Always part of the moment.

Have a great day!


Thank you for your likes, your comments, and your time. It never goes unnoticed.


I write my texts myself, correct mistakes and translate via ChatGPT (which is not a violation on Hive)! All photos were taken by me personally - I am a beginner photographer, so I ask professionals not to judge strictly.


Thank you for sharing these moments with me! Until new stories and new holidays! ✌️.


Camera 📷: Sony Alpha 7 IV full-frame

Lens 🔭: Sony FE 70-200mm F: 2.8 GM OSS II

Lens 🔭: Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS

Lens 🔭: Sony FE 24–70mm f/2.8 GM II

Processed 🛠: Lightroom

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This post has been shared on Reddit by @mirzaiqi through the HivePosh initiative.

Papaya is one of my favorite fruits. I even planted some in my garden, so I've witnessed the whole photos you posted.

You know there's the male and female specie. The male only flowers but no fruit. 😂
Here's one of mine.

That's awesome, you've got your own growing papaya! 😄
Yours looks much bigger than this one. 👍
I've heard it's great for digestion.
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My aunt owned papaya plantains in the past, I think like plantain plantations you cannot call them trees because they don't really qualify as they don't have the properties to be called trees. These are very beautiful shots.

For me, as someone from Siberia, all of this is new — I never really thought about it before.

These are very beautiful shots.

Yeah, I tried this time, but for some reason the post didn’t get much appreciation.

As I said, I've never seen a papaya flower, so thank you for this. It looks similar to lilies :)

Glad I’m not the only one who hadn’t seen it before 😄
Yeah, it really does look a bit like a lily — I didn’t expect papaya to have such delicate flowers at all.
Nature keeps surprising us 👌
!PIZZA

In Europe, maybe in warmer countries, like Spain, south Italy, Greece and Portugal, you can see such plants, but otherwise only in greenhouses or botanical gardens, if they have it, so I don't see why we should be ashamed 😜

I’ve been in Thailand for 4 years and only ever noticed it at the market as a fruit — even though it grows everywhere, like potatoes back home. I just never paid attention to it 🙂
By the way, at the market you can find it for around 20 baht per kilo — that’s roughly half a dollar.

That is awesome! Enjoy it and make the most of it till you can 🙂 Here it's expensive and not really the quality you find in the country of origin.

There was a girl from Thailand back in the legacy chain and I remember she used to post photos from the fruit market, some fruits I've never seen or heard of. Told her to consider herself lucky as we don't have those here and what we have is expensive and many times not even tasty ☹️

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