男友太凶猛1v1高h,大地资源在线资源免费观看 ,人妻少妇精品视频二区,极度sm残忍bdsm变态

Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / Environment

A forest fortress built over 3 generations

By Zhang Xu | China Daily | Updated: 2017-12-07 09:34
Share
Share - WeChat
Tourists ride horses near the Luan River in the park. Zou Hong/China Daily

“We were told that the country was going to build a national forest there and we would be part of it,” she said.

Yin was on the road for two days. When the nonstop jolting eventually ceased, she found herself in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by yellow earth sparsely dotted with clusters of grass.

It took less time for Yin’s enthusiasm to chill than she had imagined. When winter began in October, she and her colleagues, who were mostly young graduates, shivered in makeshift tents.

“We lived in improvised shelters propped up on tree trunks and covered with twigs and straw. The glassless windows were covered with paper, and in place of doors we used large planks of wood that left big gaps on both sides,” Yin recalled. “That was where we entered and exited the shelters, and where the winter winds came howling in.”

Occasionally at night, a sleepless Yin caught glimpses of the glinting green eyes of wolves, which prowled around the shelters but didn’t enter.

Yin is now 73. Back then, she was 18. “I had just graduated from a vocational school in Chengde, about 150 kilometers from Saihanba. “I was prepared for romance, but life put me to the test … and I passed that test,” she said.

Despite the harsh conditions, Saihanba was romantic. In Mongolian, the name means “beautiful highland”, and rightly so: the area, composed mainly of boundless forests and grassland dotted with crystal-clear plateau lakes, first became a royal hunting ground in the 10th century and continued to be so until the 1860s.

That was when the fortunes of the Qing (1644-1911), China’s last feudal dynasty, began to wane. As a result, the land was opened to the public, so farmers and herders moved in. In the decades that followed, trees were felled, the forests and grassland disappeared and the beauty of Saihanba vanished.

By the 1950s, Saihanba had long ceased to be a beautiful highland area 280 kilometers north of Beijing. Instead, it had become a corridor through which the wind carried sand from the deserts of Inner Mongolia down to the capital. According to the bleakest predictions, the sand would bury Beijing within a few decades.

Yin’s job was to halt the process. She was not alone: 127 graduates — mostly forestry majors — arrived from two technical schools and a college to join the 242 workers who were already on site.

In the first two years, 90 percent of the seedlings planted by the team died.

|<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next   >>|
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
 
主站蜘蛛池模板: 郴州市| 巴南区| 绥芬河市| 灵石县| 永德县| 六安市| 平遥县| 出国| 长顺县| 安达市| 中超| 濮阳市| 板桥市| 清原| 儋州市| 商水县| 西吉县| 德格县| 南川市| 新宁县| 额尔古纳市| 深水埗区| 曲阳县| 兴安盟| 治多县| 全州县| 呈贡县| 邳州市| 阜康市| 岑溪市| 涞水县| 邵阳市| 图片| 全椒县| 子长县| 屯留县| 新田县| 深水埗区| 白水县| 体育| 临夏市|