Latest News:  

English>>China Society

New grape rewards (3)

By Wang Kaihao and Yang Fang (China Daily)

10:16, June 13, 2013

A woman living near the Inner Mongolia's Kubuqi Desert picks grapes for a local vineyard.(Xinhua)

In 2008, the vineyard piloted the method of growing grapes and alfalfa on the same ridge.

Alfalfa proved to be the fragile grapevines' effective guardian. The herb typically lives 5-7 years, providing grapevines time to grow strong enough to survive sandstorms. Alfalfa stalks are buried to enhance fertility.

"You must respect nature's rules," Li says.

"If you cheat soil, it cheats you back. Using scientific approaches to adapt can best reap nature's rewards."

Alfalfa's rewards are the rich nitrogen it gives soil and the nutrition it offers sheep. Sheep have long been a staple of the area's largely nomadic herding economy.

The vineyard produces 100 tons of alfalfa annually in addition to 500 tons of grapes. The alfalfa is sent to a sheep farm 100 km away and returns as manure that fertilizes organic grapes.

The vineyard is set to expand its claim on the desert, with a 13-hectare poplar and pagoda tree nursery.

This not only improves the local environment but also provides economic opportunities to migrants driven off their land by ecological hardships.

Chen Huizi, a native of Qingyang, Gansu province, struggled with unstable corn yields in her dry and marginally arable hometown.

She came to the vineyard in 2008 and trained to become a grape farmer.

"We used to depend entirely on nature's mercy," she recalls while pruning a vine.

"A stable salary is a blessing."

This small self-sustaining ecosystem has been replicated in three larger vineyards with similar habitats west of Wuhai, in neighboring Ordos and in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region's Wuzhong. The model now covers more than 6,600 hectares.

Inner Mongolia University biology professor and Hansen's cultural director Xue Xiaoxian explains: "The word 'chateau' is usually misunderstood. People usually think of a castle with cellars. Instead, it's an essential form of agriculture."

Chateau's Chinese translation - jiuzhuang - literally means "wine manor".

"This is a carbon-reduction industry that's one step ahead of the low-carbon model," Xue says.

"Grapes are a long-term investment. We've just begun to see results."

This progress encourages Chinese winemakers long frustrated with the country's inability to produce internationally acclaimed wines.

"Chinese wine is neglected in overseas markets because its production bases lack unique characteristics," says winemaker Kang Dengzhao, who's also chief technical engineer of the winery in Hansen.

"Wineries often collect grapes from individual growers, making it difficult to stick to a single standard. Sometimes the more grapes are grown, the poorer the quality.

"But our desert grapes are distinctive."

【1】 【2】 【3】


We Recommend:

Where's the bottom line of eye catching shows?

2,000 cheongsam fans put on a show in Shanghai

Dramatic dream in little theater

China's weekly story (2013.5.24-5.31)

Bodyguard trainees experience 'Hell Week'

47 dead, 34 injured in SE China bus fire

Photos story: Mask girl's hard life

70-year-old son's love for 96-year-old mother

Massive fire kills scores at poultry plant in NE China

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:WangLili、Chen Lidan)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Austria peacekeepers start to withdraw

  2. Chinese public service ship starts voyage

  3. Afghan child labor works

  4. Hospitals, Red Cross slow to adopt system

  5. Suspected food poisoning sickens 160

  6. Teach children to avoid abuse: experts

  7. Top 10 'small' countries with features

  8. Soccer match: China VS. the Netherlands

  9. Turn white rabbit to 'gold'

  10. China owned MG unveils new car

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Market demand adds new dimension to trade row
  2. Optimism remains over resumption of talks
  3. Space dream crystallized with Shenzhou-10 launch
  4. Enthusiasts dream big after Shenzhou-10 launch
  5. Surprise at slower foreign trade growth
  6. Food waste hinders China's green shift
  7. Businesses benefit from 'gaokao economy'
  8. Sex education–a need to be open in China
  9. Deter jaywalking with shock photos
  10. Deep-voiced bosses top earners, managers

What’s happening in China

Turn white rabbit to 'gold' - A young entrepreneur's goal

  1. Hospitals, Red Cross slow to adopt system
  2. Boy's death focuses attention on child labor
  3. Banknotes worth $65,240 eaten by termintes
  4. Building collapses after blast in E China
  5. Names of victims in fatal NE plant fire released