BEIJING, Feb. 7 -- Wang Xin, 33, is a landscape designer by profession and farmer in practice. The strawberries coming from his organic plantation in the southern outskirts of Beijing are believed by his clients to be "the best of China."
Every day in Beijing, when men and women of his age are sucked in heavy traffic and endless meetings, Wang lives a life in the countryside, far from the maddening crowd.
He rises with the sun, works all day in the field or goes to farmers' market to sell fresh produce. At the end of the day, he goes to bed with sore muscles and falls into a deep sleep.
He does not take the time to consider whether it is hard work, preferring to get on with the job. "It has become a lifestyle. This is the life I chose to live."
In a country where food is so central to the culture, many well-educated city dwellers like Wang have returned to the countryside to dedicate themselves to fresher, healthier food.
RESEARCH FARMERS
Every Tuesday, Saturday and Sunday, Wang brings freshly-picked strawberries to the organic farmers' market in Beijing. The fruits are grown naturally in nutrient-rich soil, without use of fertilizers, pesticides, growth hormones or chemicals.
"I don't plan to be filthy rich, or I wouldn't have gone for organic farming," Wang said. With his firm athletic build and healthy tan, it is hard to imagine him the designer who used to spend days and nights in front of a computer screen.
Majoring in landscape botany, Wang has always been a plant lover. When he was 25, he realized his sedentary life made him put on weight, and he could no longer stand being an office drone. He quit his job, rented two plantation sheds in the suburbs and started his career from scratch.
On Tuesday, Wang presented this winter's first batch of fruit he planted in September. But work had begun in July, when he prepared all-natural organic matter to enrich the soil.
The formula has been perfected through years of research in collaboration with Beijing University of Agriculture, to simulate the formation of the fertile dark forest soil in Northeast China, known for its high crop productivity.
Logically, the true foundation of organic farming lies in soil content: if the soil is right - as a living organism with a complex organic structure - the outcome is safe and tasty food farmed without the need for fertilizing chemicals, according to Wang.
But quality produce is not the only objective. Wang hopes to build a production model that rehabilitates the soil itself - in regular plantations, the soil can degrade within a matter of years after being over-exploited.
Wang's work on the farm has not always been a smooth ride. But after a rough start he believes he has learned valuable lessons. He has gone back to the university and visited his colleagues in Tochigi Prefecture, Japan, to study the most modern organic farming techniques.
"For the organic farming to become truly sustainable, to revitalize the soil is key. I am certain that in three to four years, the soil that I have been reviving will keep getting healthier and healthier," he said.
Wang is not alone.
In Araxan, a semi-arid region located in northwest China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Ma Yanwei has spent years reinvigorating saline soil by applying water-saving methods to cultivate fruit and crops suitable for local conditions.
Sweet melon is the best-selling produce on Ma's farm. The sweetness of the melons comes from many years of study, experiment and hard work in the desert. Ma aims to find an ideal organic farming methodology to maximize the utilization of scarce water resources and mend the soil. "As long as the soil improves, it is natural to harvest healthy produce," Ma said.
In the last six years, he has seen more and more young people returning to the countryside to take on farming. In 2017 Ma set up a network for these new farmers to communicate, exchange experience and help each other. "So we could avoid longer detours and mistakes previously made by others," he said.
AN IDYLLIC FARM REBUILT
For 18 years, Zhang Zhimin, a former foreign trade expert, has been building an idyllic farm in the far southwestern end of Beijing to produce food and preserve biodiversity.
Zhang speaks several languages, so was designated to work in food imports and exports when China opened its market to the world outside. She believes that "agriculture is the art of man and nature working together."
On her bio-farm, the nature rules over man. Instead of eliminating weeds and pests, the wholesome biosphere works on its own to render seasonal harvests.
"Agriculture is the management of life, and life should be nourished by life itself," she said. On her farm Heaven's Blessings, trees, bushes, grass, insects, birds and cattle coexist in harmony. It is more like a habitat than a farm. In early summer she chops tender leaves and branches of weed under peach trees to feed the cattle and make room for the gramineous crops to thrive. In early autumn, she let cows roam free to finish the weeding.
In Wang's vegetable shed, the natural ecosystem works for the harvest to be healthy while no intervention from the outside is necessary.
"I have observed that the grass that coexists with the crops functions as a regulating factor of the microclimate by keeping the soil humid," Wang said.
Also, a native breed of spiders that leaves webs among the vegetables, feeds on the whiteflies that are usually hard to detect due to their miniscule size, preventing the need for harmful insecticides.
Wang has also gone back to ancient Chinese agricultural traditions to find inspiration to better coordinate human actions with nature, after learning the latest farming models in Japan, Germany and Israel.
At a "Farmers' Assembly" held in China Agricultural University (CAU) last month, Professor Meng Fanqiao with CAU's College of Resources and Environmental Sciences said organic/ecological farming is an important measure to improve the quality and safety of agricultural products.
"Organic/ecological farming is of vital significance for economic development as well as environmental protection in rural areas, for which it should play an imperative role in China's rural revitalization and the building of an 'ecological civilization,'" Meng said.
"The green development of the countryside is a strategy that goes hand-in-hand with the food supply security and the income level improvement," said Jin Shuqin with the Ministry of Agriculture's Research Center for Rural Economy. "To revivify ecology constitutes a crucial aspect of overall rural revitalization."
"It is our hope to promote healthy eating to become a mainstream choice, as well as the organic way to produce healthy foods," said Ma Xiaochao, project officer with Know Your Food, a self-publishing community focused on food sustainability.
国内英语资讯:Intl fellowship program shares Chinas development with world
护肤妙招:这些常见的果蔬竟然还有亮肤功效
如何才能与老板相处好?
国内英语资讯:China, Brazil to strengthen comprehensive strategic partnership
最强技能!4岁棕熊睡在细树枝上
现实版画皮:新型人造皮肤具有真实感知体验
爱在城南 奥巴马恋爱物语将搬荧幕
比尔盖茨推荐2017年5本必读好书
骚扰电话招人烦 英政府开50万英镑罚单
体坛英语资讯:Injury rules Olympic champ Rudisha out of World Championships
行星地球面对面 危险近在咫尺?
全球变暖会使花变得更香?
最高龄邦女郎莫妮卡·贝鲁奇从未公开的旧照
科学午睡的4个大招 你知道吗
体坛英语资讯:Dortmund overpower Cologne 3-1 in German Bundesliga
英女子害喜反应奇特 每日食一卷厕纸
国际英语资讯:Thai PM floats idea of moving capital to prevent overcrowding
英国神秘裸体村 首度公开日常生活照
百岁老奶奶威武 只身击退熊孩子
打底裤不算裤子 美国地方议会出女性穿衣指南
国际英语资讯:OSCE registers sharp increase of ceasefire violations in Donbas: envoy
让地球见证 男子太空求婚感动女友
1000镑一周!没钱就去英国搬砖吧
研究发现:职业决定你如何谈恋爱
我们为什么热衷于八卦
国内英语资讯:Discover China: New leap forward of Chinas oldest auto brand
想在唐顿庄园过夜吗?下个月开始接受预定!
想快乐不难 只需早上床
学生就业哪家强 英国剑桥势难挡
涨姿势 指甲上有白点怎么办
不限 |
英语教案 |
英语课件 |
英语试题 |
不限 |
不限 |
上册 |
下册 |
不限 |