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The Rural Voice, 1979-02, Page 350 Hong Kong farmers trying to stay on the land The Kadoorie Agricultural Aid Assoc. is trying to help Hong Kong farmers stay on the land. In the past seven years, almost one-quarter of the British colony's farmers, pressured by typhoons, irregular rainfall, under capitalization and disease, have left the land for higher paying city jobs. Now the Kadoorie Agricultural Aid Association, which employs about 100 agronomists, administrators and farm workers on its 356 -acre New Territories farm, is trying to develop stronger and higher -yield seed and breeding livestock to give to farmers in Hong Kong's outback. The non-profit agency, formed in 1951 by two wealthy brothers, Lawrence and Horace Kadoorie, has lent $21.4 million to farmers, has built 200 miles of oad, 317 dams, 253 bridges, 14, 687 pigsties and 41 reservoirs. The agency has also given away over 1.2 Farming Around the World million chickens, 56,355 pigs, 100,345 ducks and 95,850 fruit trees. The brothers founded their association originally to help ease the colony's burden of refugees fleeing from China's Com- munist Revolution. The association's farm is in the hills of the Chinese mainland portion of Hong Kong and uses terraces that maximize arable land space. The administrative buildings, hot houses and animal sheds, are in a valley. Horace Kadoorie still personally reviews every application for assistance received by the association. Then one of the association's three investigators spends some time deter- mining the extent of farmers' problems and their best solutions. Horace Kadoorie is then presented with about 52 names a month that investigators feel qualify for assistance. THE BASE FACTORY OUTLET " The Store That Saves You More" • MEN'S • BOYS' • LADIES' • GIRLS' • BABY WEAR • YARD GOODS • SEWING MACHINES • POUND GOODS Monday - Saturday 10 AM - 9 PM Sunday: Holidays 12 noon - 6 PM Highway 4 South of Clinton at Vanastra A typical case is that of a Chinese refugee woman whose husband was forced to leave his job to look after her. Three years ago the association helped the woman start a chicken farm. Now the group has given the woman two gilts and two porkers to start a pig farm. A second project of the association is training Gurkhas, the tough Nepalise hill tribesmen, who make up half the British troops in Hong Kong. The Gurkhas are recruited when very young, and spend from 15 to 30 years of their lives in the army, retiring with few marketable skills. A Gurkha training unit was set up at the Kadoorie farm in 1968 and has since trained more than 3,000 Gurkhas in modern agricultural methods they can put in practice when they return to Nepal. Peace River: Farming's last frontier What Mount Everest was to mount- aineers and the moon was to astronauts, the Peace River Region of northwestern Handicraft & Flower Shoppe Specializing in Dried & Silk Flower Arrangements MACRAME SUPPLIES or buy ready made hangers All sorts of UNIQUE CRAFTS & GIFTS FRESH FLOWERS available for your sped*/ occasions 306 Josephine St. Wingham, Ont Phone 357-2023 COME IN AND BROWSE THE RURAL VOICE/FEBRUARY 1979 PG. 35