|
BIZCHINA> Wen's Lens
![]() |
|
Related
Achin' to make bacon
By You Nuo (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-05-12 17:15
![]() ![]() For more than 2,000 years, the China's heartland (south of the Great Wall) has not seen traveling herdsmen on horseback, as in the northern grasslands, where the land in the Yangtze and Yellow valleys have been entirely used for intensive farming. The predominant way to produce meat has been through household-based pig farming. But not just for family consumption. The most important use for raising one or two hogs used to be for their owners to sell them to the urban slaughter houses in order to finance the farming operations and to buy daily necessities. During the reform era, for many rural households the first pieces of farm machinery were earned by selling pigs. Indeed, the poorer a place was, the more its members had to depend on pig farming for any little change in their lives - even though selling a hog could be a great trouble, as our photographer has shown here from a picture he took on a reporting tour in the early 1980s of a farmer carrying his hog to a township fair from his mountainous village in Hubei province. It was commonplace in the Chinese countryside in those days. Except for a few urban pockets, most of China was still rural, and most of the residents were struggling hard just to feed themselves. Having a hog to sell might be just the one thing that could lift them from the subsistence level. Today, while the nation's demand for meat has been rising, at least a fair number of farmers have found other ways to make a cash income. Carrying hogs to the township fair is no longer the only way for rural households to generate cash, as funds from young men and women working in the cities has become a more convenient way help to their relatives in their home villages. From mid-1990s to 2006, their spending on productive assets, mainly farm machinery, had grew more than 170 percent, while the country's pork production, including that from large State-run farms, rose by 60 percent. At the same time, pig farming has become more dependent on feed supplies, and has been concentrated in just a few provinces, such as Shandong, Hunan, and Sichuan and bearing an increasing resemblance to an industry. In another 30 years, one can reasonably imagine pigs will disappear from most Chinese households - except, however, those being kept as pets. One of the nation's pioneering pet pigs was also caught by our photographer's lens, this time in Beijing's 798 Complex, a renovated industrial neighborhood for the city's modern artists and art dealers. How time flies, you may say. And so do pigs.
![]()
(For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
|
主站蜘蛛池模板: 无码刺激a片一区二区三区| 久9re热视频这里只有精品| 国产亚洲av夜间福利香蕉149| 欧洲美熟女乱又伦av| 国产一区二区三区怡红院| 精品九九人人做人人爱| 无码国模国产在线观看免费| 女人脱裤子让男生桶爽视频| 亚洲av成人一区在线| 四虎国产精品永久一区高清| 久久综合色一综合色88| 国产极品粉嫩福利姬萌白酱| 亚洲日韩国产精品第一页一区 | 视频一区视频二区视频三| 亚洲成av人片乱码色午夜| 91精品人妻一区二区| 最新中文字幕国产精品| 国产又猛又爽又黄视频| 黑巨人与欧美精品一区| 亚洲avav天堂av在线网爱情| 人妻中文字幕精品一页| 国模无吗一区二区二区视频| 妖精视频yjsp毛片永久| 国产精品一精品二精品三| 国产精品大片中文字幕| 国产绿帽在线视频看| 伊人久久大香线蕉av一区| 久久午夜色播影院| 国模av在线| 国产一区二区不卡在线看| 欲色欲色天天天www| 中文字幕在线日韩| 国产一区二区在线有码| 国产精品午夜无码av体验区| 日韩精品视频一区二区不卡| 香蕉人妻av久久久久天天 | 国产精品香蕉在线观看不卡| 色综合久久中文综合久久激情| 国产精品中文字幕视频| 亚洲另类无码一区二区三区| 亚洲第一极品精品无码久久|