Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

World’s Best Dressed Farmer Works the Fields Wearing Fancy Suit

Darpan News Desk, 22 Oct, 2016 02:52 PM
    Kiyoto Saito, a young rice farmer from Kengo, Japan's Yamagata prefecture, is trying to change people's perception of agricultural work through his unusual attire. Whether he's driving a tractor, or is standing up to his knees in the marshy rice fields, Kiyoto is always wearing an elegant suit complete with shirt and tie.
     
    Kiyoto's family has been cultivating rice in the fields around Kengo for around 400 years, but as a teenager he found the tradition boring, and moved to the city. He returned to his native town a few years ago determined to start a family and get involved in the family business, but decided to put his unique twist on it.
     
    The idea of wearing a suit in the fields started as a joke. One day, at the dinner table, his brother joked about farming in an elegant suit, but Kyioto took it seriously. He viewed the idea as the perfect way to change public perception of agricultural work in Japan.
     
     
    "Most people think of farmers as 'dirty all day' and not making much money," he told Zoomin TV. "I want youngsters to think 'farming looks fun'
     
    But getting his point across was a bit difficult at first, and no one seemed to understand what he was doing in a rice field dressed as a businessman or office worker.
     
    "I stood out so much, they couldn't understand why I wore a suit," Kiyoto recalls. "One farmer said 'Are you making a fool out of us'?"
     
    Even his family was surprised by his choice of farming attire, at first. His grandfather worried that doing farm work in a suit would be dangerous, and his father admits he was confused the first time he saw Kiyoto in the fields, but he didn't say anything about it.
     
    But things changed as time went by and people learned about the young farmers quest to challenge preconceptions, and today Kiyoto Saito says many people support his style. "So I'll keep wearing my suit," he says.
     
     
    A dapper rice farmer is a rare sight, so it's no wonder that Saito has been featured in Japan's biggest newspaper, Yomiuri Simbun, as well as other publications, and invited on various television shows. He also has a blog where he regularly posts his farming experiences and photos of himself all dressed up.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Team USA's Silver Medal Winning Archer Looks Almost Exactly Like Leonardo Di Caprio

    Team USA's Silver Medal Winning Archer Looks Almost Exactly Like Leonardo Di Caprio
    American archer Brady Ellison is a three-time Olympian and, as of Saturday, a two-time silver medalist, taking home a second-place win in this year’s team event. 

    Team USA's Silver Medal Winning Archer Looks Almost Exactly Like Leonardo Di Caprio

    Brazilian Rugby Player Says 'Yes' To Surprise Marriage Proposal From Her Girlfriend

    Brazilian Rugby Player Says 'Yes' To Surprise Marriage Proposal From Her Girlfriend
    Isadora Cerullo, 25, was a member of the Brazil squad that narrowly missed out on reaching the knockout rounds.

    Brazilian Rugby Player Says 'Yes' To Surprise Marriage Proposal From Her Girlfriend

    Pakistan Lawmaker Demands Ban Of Hindi Doraemon Cartoons

    Pakistan Lawmaker Demands Ban Of Hindi Doraemon Cartoons
    Doraemon is a small, blue robot cat from the future sent back in time to help a hapless schoolboy and his family.

    Pakistan Lawmaker Demands Ban Of Hindi Doraemon Cartoons

    RCMP Help Once Poison-Tipped Arrows From Africa Find Their Way To B.C. Museum

    RCMP Help Once Poison-Tipped Arrows From Africa Find Their Way To B.C. Museum
    Cpl. Richard De Jong says the arrows, which are about 70 centimetres long, are from the Maasai tribes of Kenya and were designed to carry poison.

    RCMP Help Once Poison-Tipped Arrows From Africa Find Their Way To B.C. Museum

    Waterloo, Ont., Startup Aims To Take Medical Marijuana Growing High-Tech

    Waterloo, Ont., Startup Aims To Take Medical Marijuana Growing High-Tech
    TORONTO — A startup based in Waterloo, Ont., is looking to take cannabis cultivation high-tech, but the success of the mobile app-controlled system may hinge on whether new regulations will allow Canadians to grow medical marijuana at home.

    Waterloo, Ont., Startup Aims To Take Medical Marijuana Growing High-Tech

    Man Arrested After Running Onto Madrid Tarmac To Catch Plane

    Man Arrested After Running Onto Madrid Tarmac To Catch Plane
    Incredible moment Ryanair passenger jumped off boarding bridge and ran across tarmac to flag down his plane - before it stopped to let him get on 

    Man Arrested After Running Onto Madrid Tarmac To Catch Plane