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For years, Jiang Meirong, a housewife in Wentoupo, a hamlet in Dalu, a town in Qionghai, south China’s Hainan Province, lived just off her land. Since the village has neither beaches nor rainforests—the two attractions that make Hainan, also a tropical island, a top tourist destination—it was shunned by tourists. Jiang’s only means of livelihood was to sell the things she grew at the nearby market, which brought her an income of 10,000 yuan ($1,482) per year.
But three years ago, tourists started fl ocking to Wentoupo after a fellow villager, Jiang Xiang, opened a rural resort, Dream of Garden, and put the village on the tourist map. Before that Wentoupo lacked local holiday attractions and was considered out of the way. It could be accessed only by a dirt road and whenever a car sped by, clouds of dust would rise. The trees lining the road remained covered in mud and dust all year long.
Jiang Xiang, who runs a bar in Boao, another town in Qionghai, decided to invest 3 million yuan ($455,145) to spruce up his old village in Wentoupo in 2013. The local government helped him, building concrete roads. Areas in the village that had been turned into garbage dumping sites by villagers were cleaned up and wooden pavilions were erected. Old cottages were renovated into cafes while tree houses were built to accommodate visitors. Ponds and orchards were developed for tourists to fi sh and pick fruits.
The once out-of-the way village became an ideal holiday destination for experiencing rural life. Dream of Garden has been visited by over 93,000 tourists, generating a total income of 2.8 million yuan ($424,511) since it opened in 2014.
“It is an ideal escape where you can breathe clean air and enjoy the rural landscape after long days in the concrete jungle,”Tian Fang, a 30-year-old visitor from northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, told Beijing Review.
The resort has created over two dozen jobs in the small village, helping residents increase their income. From a stay-at-home housewife, Jiang Meirong has become a waitress at the resort. “I now make 22,800 yuan ($3,459) per year working as a waitress plus renting out part of my farmland to the resort,” the 37-year-old told Beijing Review.“Every year, we get fi ve days’ leave for farming, which lets me take care of my own paddy fi eld. It’s an ideal job for me.”
Dream of Garden is also environmentally friendly. No tree was cut down to build it, no existing cottage pulled down and no farmland occupied. Betel trees grow wildly through the roof of the café. A long wooden skywalk enables visitors to go deep into the paddy fi elds without trampling the crop. Eco-friendly urbanization
There are other examples of green rural tourism development like Wentoupo. At the end of 2012, Qionghai decided to develop rural tourism while preserving its rural landscape. According to the local administration’s ecofriendly urbanization policy, no trees will be cut, no farmland requisitioned and no cottages demolished in the urbanization process.
Since 2013, 78 percent of the city’s villages have been refurbished and every village today has paved roads. Several agricultural parks have been built to boost modern agriculture and tourism. The 660-hectare Longshouyang Agricultural Park is a prime example.
“Instead of conducting mass and aggressive construction, we adopted a development model suited to Qionghai’s local conditions, which is eco-friendly and preserves the local landscape,” Fu Xuanchao, then Party Chief of Qionghai, wrote in an article in Qiushi, the fl agship magazine of the CPC Central Committee, in 2014.
Eco-friendly tourism has made Qionghai greener and residents’ pockets deeper. In 2016, it received 3.94 million tourists, generating 1.74 billion yuan ($263.98 million). The rural per-capita disposable income (PCDI) rose to 13,081 yuan ($1,985), 718 yuan($109) higher than the nation average rural PCDI in 2016.
Shared farms
Lin Mingyan, a 20-year-old resident of Haosheng, a small fishing village of Wenchang in the northeast of Hainan, retreated from first-tier city Guangzhou in southern China to go back home one year after the Wenchang Space Launch Center was built near his village.
Once shabby and without any paved roads, Haosheng has only 68 villagers. Many young residents had left to work in large cities. But the turning point came in 2015 after China’s fi rst low-latitude satellite launch center was completed nearby.
The local government foresaw that the center would bring in enthusiastic rocket gazers. To accommodate visitors and help improve local residents’ livelihoods, surrounding towns and villages were spruced up to develop tourism. Haosheng, 3 km away from the best gazing point, was the best choice for tourists. The village also developed unique products related to the space launch to cater to them.
In 2015, the village cottages were refurbished and lanes repaired with the help of the local government. A 1.4-hectare garden with 21 kinds of special “space vegetables”was built. The seeds, bred on spacecraft and analogue aerospace stations under multiple mutagenesis conditions, were given by the Hainan Aerospace Engineering Breeding Research Center for free. The garden is run by an agriculture cooperative with 58 permanent villagers as stakeholders. Its produce is sold to a newly built restaurant in Haosheng, which offers “space dishes” for rocket gazers and tourists. Compared with planting traditional crops, like rice and sweet potato, growing “space vegetables” is more profitable. According to a briefing by the village authorities, the economic return of every mu (a traditional Chinese measurement equaling 667 square meters) of space vegetables farmland is expected to amount to 6,000 yuan ($910), tripling the original earning of traditional farmland.
“The space launch center has perked up Wenchang’s tourism greatly,” Wu Zongsen, Vice Mayor of Wenchang, told Beijing Review. When the center opened on June 25, 2016, there were 300,000 tourists that very day. The village restaurant raked in 10,000 yuan(1,517), an unprecedented daily income for its former fi sherman owner.
In April 2017, an aerospace museum was built close to the village, displaying rocket remains, models and space suits. “These usually inaccessible exhibits have drawn lots of students so far,” Wu said. Lin is working as a guard in the museum. “My hometown is getting better. It’s more comfortable to work here than in Guangzhou,” he said.
Now the village is looking beyond the windfalls during rocket-launching days. “To make our village better known, we need to introduce the Internet Plus model,” Zheng Youchao, head of the village, said.
In January, Haosheng became China’s first village to boast a global blockchain innovation center. Blockchain technology involves storing digitally recorded “blocks” of data in a linear “chain”. The aim is to develop big data, the Internet of Things and tourism. A public account has been opened on popular social media platform WeChat to introduce Haosheng to the outside world. That is also the first for a village in Wenchang. Besides, an online store has been started to sell villagers’ farm produce.
Most importantly, a “shared farm” concept has been introduced for villagers to share their “green property” with people far away via the Internet. According to Wang Junxiang, Product Director of Hainan-based Internet service provider icloudinn Network, in a shared farm one can “adopt” a piece of “space vegetable” garden, livestock or a coconut tree in the village via an online app. The adopters pay a sum of money online to share any of these properties for a period of time, and are entitled to products from that land, meat from that livestock or fruits of that tree for that period of time.
They can either rent a cottage in the village and take care of the vegetables and livestock by themselves, or hire farmers to take care of them and monitor the process via live-streaming, WeChat or short messages. In this way, everyone can share in a farm online, big or small.
But three years ago, tourists started fl ocking to Wentoupo after a fellow villager, Jiang Xiang, opened a rural resort, Dream of Garden, and put the village on the tourist map. Before that Wentoupo lacked local holiday attractions and was considered out of the way. It could be accessed only by a dirt road and whenever a car sped by, clouds of dust would rise. The trees lining the road remained covered in mud and dust all year long.
Jiang Xiang, who runs a bar in Boao, another town in Qionghai, decided to invest 3 million yuan ($455,145) to spruce up his old village in Wentoupo in 2013. The local government helped him, building concrete roads. Areas in the village that had been turned into garbage dumping sites by villagers were cleaned up and wooden pavilions were erected. Old cottages were renovated into cafes while tree houses were built to accommodate visitors. Ponds and orchards were developed for tourists to fi sh and pick fruits.
The once out-of-the way village became an ideal holiday destination for experiencing rural life. Dream of Garden has been visited by over 93,000 tourists, generating a total income of 2.8 million yuan ($424,511) since it opened in 2014.
“It is an ideal escape where you can breathe clean air and enjoy the rural landscape after long days in the concrete jungle,”Tian Fang, a 30-year-old visitor from northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, told Beijing Review.
The resort has created over two dozen jobs in the small village, helping residents increase their income. From a stay-at-home housewife, Jiang Meirong has become a waitress at the resort. “I now make 22,800 yuan ($3,459) per year working as a waitress plus renting out part of my farmland to the resort,” the 37-year-old told Beijing Review.“Every year, we get fi ve days’ leave for farming, which lets me take care of my own paddy fi eld. It’s an ideal job for me.”
Dream of Garden is also environmentally friendly. No tree was cut down to build it, no existing cottage pulled down and no farmland occupied. Betel trees grow wildly through the roof of the café. A long wooden skywalk enables visitors to go deep into the paddy fi elds without trampling the crop. Eco-friendly urbanization
There are other examples of green rural tourism development like Wentoupo. At the end of 2012, Qionghai decided to develop rural tourism while preserving its rural landscape. According to the local administration’s ecofriendly urbanization policy, no trees will be cut, no farmland requisitioned and no cottages demolished in the urbanization process.
Since 2013, 78 percent of the city’s villages have been refurbished and every village today has paved roads. Several agricultural parks have been built to boost modern agriculture and tourism. The 660-hectare Longshouyang Agricultural Park is a prime example.
“Instead of conducting mass and aggressive construction, we adopted a development model suited to Qionghai’s local conditions, which is eco-friendly and preserves the local landscape,” Fu Xuanchao, then Party Chief of Qionghai, wrote in an article in Qiushi, the fl agship magazine of the CPC Central Committee, in 2014.
Eco-friendly tourism has made Qionghai greener and residents’ pockets deeper. In 2016, it received 3.94 million tourists, generating 1.74 billion yuan ($263.98 million). The rural per-capita disposable income (PCDI) rose to 13,081 yuan ($1,985), 718 yuan($109) higher than the nation average rural PCDI in 2016.
Shared farms
Lin Mingyan, a 20-year-old resident of Haosheng, a small fishing village of Wenchang in the northeast of Hainan, retreated from first-tier city Guangzhou in southern China to go back home one year after the Wenchang Space Launch Center was built near his village.
Once shabby and without any paved roads, Haosheng has only 68 villagers. Many young residents had left to work in large cities. But the turning point came in 2015 after China’s fi rst low-latitude satellite launch center was completed nearby.
The local government foresaw that the center would bring in enthusiastic rocket gazers. To accommodate visitors and help improve local residents’ livelihoods, surrounding towns and villages were spruced up to develop tourism. Haosheng, 3 km away from the best gazing point, was the best choice for tourists. The village also developed unique products related to the space launch to cater to them.
In 2015, the village cottages were refurbished and lanes repaired with the help of the local government. A 1.4-hectare garden with 21 kinds of special “space vegetables”was built. The seeds, bred on spacecraft and analogue aerospace stations under multiple mutagenesis conditions, were given by the Hainan Aerospace Engineering Breeding Research Center for free. The garden is run by an agriculture cooperative with 58 permanent villagers as stakeholders. Its produce is sold to a newly built restaurant in Haosheng, which offers “space dishes” for rocket gazers and tourists. Compared with planting traditional crops, like rice and sweet potato, growing “space vegetables” is more profitable. According to a briefing by the village authorities, the economic return of every mu (a traditional Chinese measurement equaling 667 square meters) of space vegetables farmland is expected to amount to 6,000 yuan ($910), tripling the original earning of traditional farmland.
“The space launch center has perked up Wenchang’s tourism greatly,” Wu Zongsen, Vice Mayor of Wenchang, told Beijing Review. When the center opened on June 25, 2016, there were 300,000 tourists that very day. The village restaurant raked in 10,000 yuan(1,517), an unprecedented daily income for its former fi sherman owner.
In April 2017, an aerospace museum was built close to the village, displaying rocket remains, models and space suits. “These usually inaccessible exhibits have drawn lots of students so far,” Wu said. Lin is working as a guard in the museum. “My hometown is getting better. It’s more comfortable to work here than in Guangzhou,” he said.
Now the village is looking beyond the windfalls during rocket-launching days. “To make our village better known, we need to introduce the Internet Plus model,” Zheng Youchao, head of the village, said.
In January, Haosheng became China’s first village to boast a global blockchain innovation center. Blockchain technology involves storing digitally recorded “blocks” of data in a linear “chain”. The aim is to develop big data, the Internet of Things and tourism. A public account has been opened on popular social media platform WeChat to introduce Haosheng to the outside world. That is also the first for a village in Wenchang. Besides, an online store has been started to sell villagers’ farm produce.
Most importantly, a “shared farm” concept has been introduced for villagers to share their “green property” with people far away via the Internet. According to Wang Junxiang, Product Director of Hainan-based Internet service provider icloudinn Network, in a shared farm one can “adopt” a piece of “space vegetable” garden, livestock or a coconut tree in the village via an online app. The adopters pay a sum of money online to share any of these properties for a period of time, and are entitled to products from that land, meat from that livestock or fruits of that tree for that period of time.
They can either rent a cottage in the village and take care of the vegetables and livestock by themselves, or hire farmers to take care of them and monitor the process via live-streaming, WeChat or short messages. In this way, everyone can share in a farm online, big or small.