China Daily

SEA OF GOLD FLOODS ‘TOWN OF A THOUSAND ISLANDS’

A patchwork of shimmering rapeseed fields spliced by a network of meandering green waterways presents a unique vista in Xinghua. Cang Wei reports in Nanjing.

- Liu Maomao contribute­d to this story. Contact the writer at cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Flooded in a sea of golden rape flowers, the Qianduo scenic area in Xinghua, Jiangsu province, attracts millions of tourists from around the world every year.

The scenic area, also called the Qiandao Rape Flower Scenic Area, covers an area of 4.3 square kilometers. It is reputed to be one of the most beautiful spots to see rape flowers in the country.

Located in Dongwang village in Xinghua, the scenic area is holding its 10th Rape Flower Festival from late March to early May. With its unique scenery of a sea of golden rape flowers set amid a network of lush green rivers and lakes, it attracted more than 2 million tourists in 2017.

The panorama of the rivers and waterways winding through the fields of rape flower duotian are unique in China. Duotian, which is the local name for “raised field”, are small patches of fertile soil created to have easy access to water for growing crops.

In ancient times, local farmers living near these rivers and lakes dug up the soil up from the riverbeds and piled the soil high to form farmland where they could grow crops. Each duotian is divided into sections by these waterways, and farmers need to commute by boats to tend to their crops, without the use of agricultur­al machinery.

A lack of modern machinery and the practice of growing rape crops turned out to be a distinctiv­e ecological travel resource for the city. The thousands of fields at Qiandao differ in size and shape, with the largest ones extending to around 2,000 square meters, while the smallest ones cover just 2 square meters.

Almost every raised field is surrounded by water. The area is also called the “Town of a Thousand Islands”, and poets have been writing about the area’s outstandin­g beauty since ancient times.

These days in Xinghua, tourists can not only meander through the vivid seas of flowers by boat or go fishing, they can also catch a glimpse of the local lifestyle and village culture, and even get involved in harvesting farming products.

Thanks to its clean water and fertile environmen­t, the region is also famous for its rice, crab and taro, which have become nationwide favorites since they were introduced in A Bite of China, a popular Chinese food documentar­y.

Xinghua’s duotian agrosystem was selected as one of the “globally important agricultur­al heritage systems” by Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations in April 2004 for its splendid landscapes and agricultur­al sustainabi­lity.

“The city’s ecological advantage is its precious treasure,” said Li Weiguo, Party secretary of Xinghua. “The city and its people have been benefiting from the local ecology, and we will continue to protect the environmen­t for sustainabl­e developmen­t.”

As a cultural city with a long history, Xinghua has been home to many famous people over the centuries and earned the reputation as a “city of talent” as early as the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).

Fan Zhongyan (989-1052), a politician, poet and military thinker, was once the county magistrate in Xinghua.

Shi Naian, author of The Water Margin, was also born in Xinghua and returned to his hometown to finish the masterpiec­e, which is considered one of the most famous novels of ancient China. Shi’s tomb, located in Xinduo township, is a cultural relic under the protection of the Jiangsu government.

Many novels from the Ming and Qing (1368-1911) dynasties were written by writers born in Xinghua, making it an important place related to the study of literature from that period.

Xinghua is also the hometown of many famous scholars, including Zheng Banqiao, Liu Xizai and Bi Feiyu. It was named as China’s first “Home of Chinese Novels” in April 2012.

Bi Feiyu, a writer and professor at the Faculty of Arts at Nanjing University, has been awarded both the Lu Xun Literature Prize and Mao Dun Literature Prize, China’s top literature awards, on several occasions.

Several of Bi’s works have been adapted into movies, including Blind Massage, a winner at Taiwan’s 2014 Golden Horse Awards.

The city government has been making efforts to build a “cultural Xinghua”, for which several literature prizes and institutes have been establishe­d and activities themed on literature have been held.

There are more than 240 cultural relic and historical sites in Xinghua. Some of the houses of former famous residents have now been protected at a provincial level.

By 2014, there were 74 cultural relic units under protection.

Two local customs usually carried out around Tomb Sweeping Day — Maoshan haozi, a style of folk song performed to synchroniz­ed movements, with one person leading, and Maoshan boat racing, which is similar to the dragon boat racing held nationwide at Duanwu Festival, only the boats are not decorated as dragons — have also been added to the national list of intangible cultural heritage.

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 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Tourists enjoy the view of golden rape flowers by boat in the Qianduo scenic area in Xinghua, Jiangsu province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Tourists enjoy the view of golden rape flowers by boat in the Qianduo scenic area in Xinghua, Jiangsu province.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A farmer paddles a boat in the rape flower field in the scenic area.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A farmer paddles a boat in the rape flower field in the scenic area.

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