新浪微博
腾讯微博
微信
QQ空间
QQ好友
手机阅读分享话题

China

Discover China: Prosperity grows on agricultural tradition in east China county

2020-06-17 09:13:39

HANGZHOU, June 16 (Xinhua) -- In 2007, Jin Yuepin made a life-changing decision. He came back to the county of Qingtian in east China's Zhejiang Province, after spending 28 years in France.

"When I came back in 2007, I was shocked by the vast, desolate fields in my village and decided to do something," said Jin.

Jin and some other overseas returnees started wading into the water in the Chinese market by cultivating the Qingtian field-grown carp in the idle farmlands.

Raising carp in the fields is a tradition that has more than 1,200 years of history in Qingtian. In the past, local farmers in Qingtian put baby carp in the rice fields, where bugs and plankton were natural prey for the fish. Meanwhile, the fish helped rid the fields of bugs while loosening the soil.

This symbiosis even won recognition from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, as it was identified as a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System in 2005.

But Jin's first venture turned out to be a complete failure.

"We failed in the beginning because we didn't have much experience as overseas returnees," he said, adding that in the first three years of the failed cultivation, they lost more than 4 million yuan (about 565,100 U.S. dollars).

But Jin is not one to give up easily.

Jin concluded from the failures that the traditional cultivation methods he inherited from the older generations may not always apply to the modern context.

"In the past, farmers didn't care much about how many fish survived because they only needed to meet their own demand, but we must ensure a decent survival rate for our business," he said.

To overcome the challenge, Jin attended a university in Shanghai in 2011 to learn about fish cultivation technologies.

"Those failures taught me a good lesson. After learning, I grasped scientific technologies," he said. "We integrated old nuggets of wisdom with modern innovation and eventually succeeded."

While maintaining traditional fish raising methods, Jin and his partners paid more attention to controlling the water quality and hydrogen levels to improve the survival rate of the carp.

In 2011, Jin and local farmers jointly established a rural cooperative, involving more people in the fish business. They are currently enjoying the success of their business, Jin said.

Meanwhile, a study base has been established in the locality, allowing students from home and abroad to experience the distinctive culture in Qingtian.

Jin hopes to promote the symbiotic relationship between rice and fish so that more people will get to know the cultural heritage.

Jin said he regularly shows the changes in his hometown to his overseas family members and friends via livestreaming or video calls.

"We plan to bring more young people to Qingtian to help develop our hometown," he said. Enditem

Editor:Jiang Yiwei