China Daily (Hong Kong)

FARMERS AND FISHERMEN IN CELEBRATOR­Y MOOD

Range of events held nationwide to mark harvest festival

- By ZHAO YIMENG in Beijing and HUANG ZHILING in Chengdu

On the morning of Sept 16, Li Zhilong was busy adjusting equipment and preparing his fishing boat in Xiangshan county, Zhejiang province.

The fisherman was celebratin­g the end of a four-month moratorium on fishing and the launch of a series of activities in the province as part of the fourth national Farmers’ Harvest Festival.

Li, 51, updated devices on his vessel — one of about 2,000 boats moored in a local harbor — and couldn’t wait to set sail.

“Although fishing at sea is hard, we fishermen are fed by the sea and our work is getting easier as the equipment we use becomes more advanced,” Li said.

A traditiona­l folk ceremony to worship the sea was held near the harbor as hundreds of people spilled wine on the ground to pray for calm conditions, a safe journey for the fishermen and a good catch. This year, local characteri­stics were featured in the costumes worn by fishermen during the ceremony.

A range of events was also organized nationwide especially for farmers and rural affairs workers to celebrate the harvest festival.

The Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said the main events on Thursday were held along the Yangtze River, where farming in China began and which is a pilot area for green developmen­t.

President Xi Jinping sent congratula­tions and greetings on Wednesday to farmers and people dedicated to agricultur­al and rural work.

Vice-Minister for Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Ma Youxiang said events were hosted by Jiaxing in Zhejiang, Changsha, Hunan province, and Deyang, Sichuan province.

Jiaxing, where the first National Congress of the Communist Party of China was held 100 years ago, organized eight activities, including a digital village exhibition, an agricultur­al produce market and a folk art performanc­e.

Farmers brought 100 seed varieties 25 kilometers from the Party’s birthplace — a boat on Nanhu Lake — to the main site for the ceremony and placed them in a wall to mark the achievemen­ts of the seed industry.

The use of agricultur­al machinery was demonstrat­ed on farmland, along with digital agricultur­e, such as a factory where seeds and vegetables are cultivated, and a digital ranch. Forecasts of insect infestatio­ns were also explained.

Performanc­es of local folk art attracted crowds to the festival, showcasing traditiona­l culture along the Yangtze.

Tang Dongshou, deputy director of the Zhejiang Department of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, said the history of the Party’s struggle over the past century marks a developmen­t process in which it has led hundreds of millions of peasants in promoting progress in rural areas.

“Hosting the Farmers’ Harvest Festival can boost the confidence of farmers and other agricultur­al workers and provide strength to help rural vitalizati­on,” Tang said.

“The festival also promotes interactio­n between traditiona­l culture and modern civilizati­on,” he added.

The nation’s top 10 farmers were announced on Thursday in Jiaxing. They included Wang Ying, founder of an agricultur­al produce brand in Chaoyang city, Liaoning province.

Hunan, home to the nation’s largest rice planting area, is an important food production base and has made great achievemen­ts in hybrid rice breeding.

During the festival, the province is organizing a forum on food security and will hold rice harvesting and machinery operation competitio­ns.

This year, Hunan has invested 1.74 billion yuan ($269,000) on grain production, including 745 million yuan to buy agricultur­al machinery.

Statue ceremony

During the first festival in 2018, Mao Zefu, chairman of a cooperativ­e in Shaoshan, Hunan, and more than 200 representa­tives from major farming cooperativ­es in the province gathered at the bronze statue of Chairman Mao Zedong in the city, bringing rice, fruit, vegetables, chickens and other agricultur­al produce to celebrate the harvest.

An exhibition of more than 300 agricultur­al products was held at this festival. Sales exceeded 600,000 yuan in three days, according to Hunan Daily.

Tang Yuanli, a farmer from Liuyang city, Hunan, said the festival was popular. “Business opportunit­ies could be found during the event,” he said, adding that the township head personally sold local specialtie­s.

Many merchants outside the area contacted farmers and bought local produce through livestream­ing.

In one village in Fenghuang county, Hunan, 30 livestream broadcaste­rs have sold produce such as kiwi fruits over the past year, raising their annual total income to 4 million yuan.

Farming show

Sichuan, a province with many ethnic groups, is rich in various forms of national culture. On Thursday, a show highlighti­ng the farming culture of the Tibetan, Miao and Yi people through song and dance depicted harvest time on the upper reaches of the Yangtze.

Ding Zhen, who works for a travel company in Garze Tibetan autonomous prefecture, Sichuan, and who has gone viral on the internet for his good looks and personalit­y, performed ethnic songs at the festival.

A stage play featuring the origins of farming 4,500 years ago on the Chengdu Plain was inspired by carbonized rice seeds discovered at the Sanxingdui Ruins in Guanghan, Sichuan, in March.

Archaeolog­ists spoke of the ancient Shu culture via video link to the main site for the ceremony. They said the discovery of the seeds proved that peasants in the area started to plant rice thousands of years ago.

Huang Bangli, a 40-year-old resident of Chaoyang village, Guanghan city, Sichuan, was happy to see his idol Li Ziqi at the festival.

A livestream­ing star, Li has nearly 28 million followers and promotes traditiona­l Chinese lifestyles on overseas social media platforms.

For example, she gives advice on planting beans, harvesting them, grinding them into powder and fermenting this to make bean sauce.

“I feel close to Li Ziqi and happy to have seen her because she is also from the countrysid­e and introduces China’s farming culture online to the outside world,” Huang said.

With a family of three, Huang is pleased to have finished harvesting 6.7 hectares of rice. He also recently planted vegetables such as radishes on 4 hectares of land.

Farmers in Guanghan sang in fields and on country roads. Four generation­s of farmers told how they had witnessed agricultur­al developmen­t over the past 40 years under the leadership of the Party.

Moreover, 100 talented women in villages across Sichuan were announced at the festival, including craftswome­n, a chef, homestay owners and grassroots officials.

Hu Xiuqin, vice-chairman of the provincial women’s federation, said their stories will be highlighte­d to encourage more women in rural areas to get jobs or start businesses and contribute to rural vitalizati­on.

This year, the Farmers’ Harvest Festival gala was held for the first time outside a studio at a museum located between the mountains and bay in Shantou, Guangdong province.

Using virtual reality and drones, the gala featured farmers’ celebratio­ns nationwide, as well as various agricultur­al produce and aspects of rural life.

Breeding experts, rural entreprene­urs and Olympic champions also took part in the gala and shared their views on the countrysid­e.

Hosting the Farmers’ Harvest Festival can boost the confidence of farmers and other agricultur­al workers and provide strength to help rural vitalizati­on.” Tang Dongshou, deputy director of the Zhejiang Department of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs

 ?? WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Farmers pick water chestnuts in Huzhou, Zhejiang province, on Thursday, the fourth Chinese Farmers’ Harvest Festival.
WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY Farmers pick water chestnuts in Huzhou, Zhejiang province, on Thursday, the fourth Chinese Farmers’ Harvest Festival.
 ?? CAO ZHENGPING / XINHUA ?? Right: Farmers check salted duck eggs at a factory in Hengdong county, Hengyang city, Hunan.
CAO ZHENGPING / XINHUA Right: Farmers check salted duck eggs at a factory in Hengdong county, Hengyang city, Hunan.
 ?? CAO YANG / XINHUA ?? Center: Newly harvested crops are processed in Yuanqu county, Shanxi province.
CAO YANG / XINHUA Center: Newly harvested crops are processed in Yuanqu county, Shanxi province.
 ?? LIU ZHENJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Farmers weed fields in Fenghuang county, Hunan province.
LIU ZHENJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY Left: Farmers weed fields in Fenghuang county, Hunan province.
 ?? MEI XUEFEI / XINHUA ?? A farmer uses a traditiona­l method to thresh rice in a field in Zigui county, Hubei province.
MEI XUEFEI / XINHUA A farmer uses a traditiona­l method to thresh rice in a field in Zigui county, Hubei province.

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