国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Society

Urbanites take to farming to ensure food safety

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2011-07-03 09:26
Large Medium Small

ZHENGZHOU - It has been a weekly routine for Yao Weihua, a housewife in Zhengzhou, the capital city of central Henan Province, to get vegetables for her family from a small garden she rents in the city's suburb.

The garden has lettuce and other fresh vegetables that are grown without the use of chemical fertilizers or pesticides, Yao said.

Her weekly trip to the garden spares her from shopping at local vegetable markets, where Yao fears produce could be tainted with harmful chemicals, as the media has frequently reported on.

The excessive use of agricultural chemicals became a grave concern of Yao years ago, when she had intense cravings for cucumbers during her pregnancy, but found that the cucumbers she bought would swell up to unnatural sizes after being stored for just a few days.

This prompted Yao to seriously consider growing food by herself, an idea resonated with a group of 20 parents, who in 2010 founded the Safeguard Homeland Green Consumers Association.

"It's an association of mothers who joined to find safer food for their children," said Yao, who noted that the membership has grown to 80 this spring.

The association made a deal with an eco-farm that uses earthworms to help fertilize the crops. The farm leased out small pieces of land, usually 20 square meters as a share, to every member of the association at the monthly rent of 100 yuan (about $15).

Members could either plant vegetables themselves or hire farmers to do the work for 280 yuan for each month.

"Now I can finally put my mind at ease, as the vegetables are grown right before my eyes on ecologically fertilized land," said Zhang Lushuang, one of the association's members.

Mutual benefits

Like the members of "Safeguard Homeland," urban consumers, eager to secure a safer diet, are rushing to manage the production of their own food, by directly engaging in the farm work or commissioning production to eco-farms.

It helps consumers bypass the sophisticated food chain, a chief supplier of chemicals in Chinese food, Yao said.

The surge in the number of customers has also encouraged rural eco-farmers, as it suggested a boost in the sluggish market of organic products, said Zhang Yanbin, secretary of the Communist Party of China branch of Nanmazhuang village, which has spearheaded the eco-farming in Henan Province.

"When we first promoted the production of organic foods, we deeply believed that money would keep flowing in," said Zhang.

However, sales proved difficult in a market where goods are often labeled as "organic," even if they are not.

He Huili, a professor at the China Agricultural University and an early proponent of eco-farming in Nanmazhuang, said a lack of information made it difficult for consumers to build trust in genuine organic foods.

   Previous Page 1 2 Next Page  

闵行区| 朔州市| 兴城市| 宝应县| 富裕县| 施甸县| 台州市| 石渠县| 闸北区| 江津市| 土默特右旗| 达拉特旗| 芦山县| 万全县| 大冶市| 伊宁县| 淳安县| 宣汉县| 固原市| 通化市| 宁阳县| 马尔康县| 印江| 桦南县| 宁乡县| 台南县| 页游| 大庆市| 政和县| 西峡县| 儋州市| 平安县| 伽师县| 江华| 长兴县| 永定县| 樟树市| 福安市| 南安市| 诸城市| 宜城市|