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The Times They Are A Changing

你们好!

This was my last week with my homestay family. It was a great experience and significantly helped to improve my Chinese.

I am now on a two and a half week trip with my group traveling around the Yunnan province. Some of the more famous cities we will be visiting include: Dali, Lijiang, and Shangrila.

For one night, we stayed on a Doaist mountain and had a lecture from a Daoist monk. We were able to go on a 10 mile hike with over 6 different temples a few hundred years old. I put my early morning riser skills to good use and was the only person in my group who woke up a 4:30 am to practice Taiji with the monk at the temple and listen to him play a flute for three hours. It was definitely worth and is a memory I will have for the rest of my life.

In Dali, I visited the famous and Three Pagodas. We also went to a tea plantation, picked tea leaves and roasted our own green tea! We also learned how to do traditional tie-dye of the Bai ethnic minority.

Tomorrow, I will be entering a rural home stay for five days. The family will not speak mandarin Chinese nor will they speak English so it will be an extremely interesting time!

Unfortunately, wifi is extremely limited here and I am unable to upload photos, hopefully next week I’ll be able to add some!

<3Elizabeth

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Feeling Like Home

This week was my last week with my host family and it was filled with various trips around Kunming. Below is a view from my host family’s apartment, it was an especially sunny day in the city.

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One afternoon I went with some friends to a park in the city, it also has roller coaster so we decided to be adventurous and went on the one that goes upside down four times. 

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My apartment seems to be in a pretty great location with lots of cafes and gyms near it. My friends and I found a newly opened rock climbing gym, i forgot how hard it is to scale a wall!

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This week we had an assignment to write a life history paper. It involved going up to strangers and asking them questions about their life. Of course this was all done in Chinese! I went to a place called Green Lake Park where most retired people like to hang out in the mornings. I found this experience to be extremely rewarding and provide firsthand accounts that I otherwise would have no idea of their existence. These concrete examples allowed me to get a better understanding of Chinese history, Chinese society and Chinese people’s life. The exercise also helped me to build up field study skills such as designing questions, conducting interviews, and analyzing the data I collected. I did find the life history interviews to be frustrating at times. I could understand the very basics of the conversation but there were most likely many smaller details that I missed for lack of vocabulary and fluency. There were also more complicated questions that I would have loved to ask on the spot. Despite these frustrations I did find this exercise demonstrated to me that just in 6 weeks, my language skills have improved significantly!

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My host family took me out to dinner to celebrate my last weekend with them. Time seems to be flying by so quickly, but we are already planning a trip for my host sister to visit me in the summer!

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Just a photo of my host mom and I bonding over face masks!

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I hope everyone has a great week!

Elizabeth

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Rice Paddies and Hybrid Seeds

Exploring Yunnan

This past week I had to complete a project called the Yunnan exploration Project. Our task was to go in groups of two or three anywhere in the Yunnan province for 5 days and study particular aspects of a city. I traveled with two friends approximately 200 miles south of Kunming, along the Red River. Here one can find an area of terraced fields overflowing with rice that has been cultivated for over 1300 years.

My journey to this region began in Kunming where I found bus tickets readily available providing easy access to the supposedly remote region. After seven hours on a bus packed with everything from white American tourists to an elderly women dressed in traditional clothing vomiting in a bucket, I finally found myself in the humid and green old town of Xinjiezhen high in the Ailao Mountains. Immediately there was a change in the atmosphere. I had left the hustle and bustle of the city and was now in the manure smelling, fly infested countryside. As soon as I was outside the bus station, there was a swarm of all too eager taxi drivers offering me a ride. It was already late in the evening so after arriving to the TS Inn, I crashed into a deep sleep.

The Hani minority of Yuanyang County, are known for their ingenuity and mastering of large scale rice production. They have mastered this art for generations leaving the sides of mountains carved out with rows and rows of terraces.

After an early breakfast, I asked the Inn keeper where to find a taxi back to Xinjiezhen so I could hike out to the small town of Longshuba. The Inn keeper said that being a tourist, a taxi would be too inconvenient and that I should purchase a full day ticket to ride on a bus that stops at all the major viewing points. This was not my idea of travel. I had come to learn and explore the remote villages of Yuanyang, I was not about to hop on a crowded bus with other tourists who most likely all spoke English. I left the Inn and decided to inquire neighboring buildings about finding some sort of local transportation. A women dressed in what appeared to be black woven traditional ethnic clothing trimmed in blue, informed me in her heavily accented mandarin, that there frequently are mini buses which I could wave down from the side of the road. A bus came rumbling by and I negotiated a price before hoping in.

Less than 30 miles north of the border of Vietnam, at an altitude between 3,000 and 6,000 feet more than 400,000 people make a living harvesting rice. Unfortunately, traditional strands suited to local ecology are no longer valued. Through government initiatives and an expanding global market, hybrid seeds are taking over the region.

Once back in Xinjiezhen, I began what was supposed to be a four mile hike and would end up being 14 miles. As I left the outskirts of the small city and headed towards Longshuba, I more frequently crossed paths with the typical farm animals, ducks, pigs, chickens, and water buffalos. An occasional farmer would stare with curious eyes wondering what a strange sight it was to see such a white foreign looking woman strolling along the side of the windy mountain roads. After more than an hour of going from town to town asking if I was indeed headed towards Longshuba, I arrived at the edge of a field of rice paddies. All I had to do was meander through the terraces and I would finally reach the town.

Hybrid crops are produced by cross breeding two genetically advantaged strands, giving birth to a superior offspring. However, this hybrid vigor only lasts for a single generation as all nutrients and advantages in yield are lost forcing farmers to buy new seeds every planting season rather than saving them from the previous harvest.

Walking from paddy to paddy, I noticed the time and effort it took to maintain such a sculpted landscape. Muddy walls were piled high and interwoven with dried grasses to contain the flooded paddies. But I had to be diligent, one wrong step and I would find myself face first in a pile of slimy, snake infested water. It took some intense concentration but I managed to reach the entrance of the town a little wet, but only from my own sweat. The town appeared to have been run entirely by children, they were everywhere, though I suppose most of the adults had to have been working in the fields. I made my way through the concrete and adobe plastered houses while exchanging many “Hello’s” and “Goodbye’s.” It felt odd walking through what I consider to be the middle of nowhere, on the other side of the planet, and still being greeted by a “Hello.” I took this to mean I was not the first foreigner to explore the quaintness of this little town.

Most farmers in this region are growing rice as a cash crop, solely producing for the market. Their focus is on yield and prices, thus the majority of traditional framing areas have turned to the desired promises of pest resistant hybrid seeds. Nevertheless, private companies are moving into this new economic frontier and challenging state seed companies. The slow liberalization of China’s seed sector has been and will continue to significantly change the livelihoods of rural farmers.

The next morning, I decided to embark on a more typical tourist adventure. I still had to haggle my way into a boxed aluminum van, but I decided to travel to the “Must See” of the rice paddies, Laohuzui. When the van pulled up in front of the entrance to the viewing platform, I could immediately tell this experience would be different. Women dressed in traditional clothing eager to strike a deal, were waving post cards in my face the moment I stepped out. Cars lined the street and domestic tourists, obviously from urban areas dressed in their bright white shirts and gem studded purses, were snapping selfies from every angle. This viewing point even required a hefty entrance fee. The scenery was undoubtedly beautiful, but the day was completely lacking in what I consider to be an authentic cultural exchange. Deciding to walk the uncommon path the day before, proved to be increasingly beneficial.

It took some guts to hop on all those vans and try my best in broken Chinese to figure out where I was headed, but every moment of it gave me such an adrenaline rush. It comforts me that while I was in Yuanyang I noticed people still sold and ate traditional red rice varieties, but I know the ill-fated future is all too near. This journey proved that even the remote areas of China are not untouched by the ever increasing globalized world in which we live. The authority of Chinese government is being tested and will probably continue to be so well into the future. Foreign companies are beginning to move into the private rice sector despite safeguards put in place by the state. Rural farmers have no idea the power of transnational seed companies once they get their foot in the door. China is not the only country to be challenged in this way, but it will take some careful navigation to ensure tradition is preserved.

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