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The Rural Voice, 1992-12, Page 38Travel China makes use of every inch to grow food for a billion For Canadian farmers, from a land where over production of food is the greatest problem, it's hard to imagine a land where there are 17 million new mouths to feed each year and where every spare piece of land is turned into food production. That's what we, a group of Canadian in the Advanced Agricultural Leadership Program, found when we visited China and Hong Kong in March and April 1991. We found that the need to feed this burgeoning population of 1.2 billion had brought reforms to the farming population. Family farm operations now have more control over their small farms that average two to three mu (.2 hectares), greatly increasing productivity. The small farmers can sell any amount of produce they grow over and above the basic government requirement, at "free markets" where they can deal directly with consumers. While the standard of living for Chinese farmers is still far behind Canadian farmers, there are some farmers who have been able to build new houses with the increased income. Still, it costs a week's salary to buy a pound of meat for the average Chinese and the yearly income for a Chinese farmer is about $150 per year. China gives new meaning to the term intensive farming. Terrace farming is found throughout China as farmers seek to put every available 34 THE RURAL VOICE square inch of soil into production. Forty-five per cent of China's cultivated land is located in the mountains. We visited a farm with a com crop growing on ridges with soybeans and wheat rotated on the areas between the ridges. Hand labour allows multi - cultivation of 145 million hectares of land. Millions of hectares of land grow three crops every two years. On a visit to a Chinese dairy farm we saw 170 Holsteins being hand - milked by 30 full-time employees who milk three times a day. To west - BY SHIRLEY HAZLITT ern eyes this looked backward, but China has its own unemployment problem. Unlike Canada, China doesn't have any unemployment insurance or welfare. Labour- intensive production methods are both a reality and a necessity in China's unique situation. We saw a concerted effort toward greater production efficiency, quality Don Lewis of Holstein, one of the AALP tour group looks at a wheat crop grown between corn on ridges. and quantity through technological advancements such as improved genetics and enhanced feeding programs. One of the trade opportunities that might exist for Canada is the sale of better seed varieties that would increase production without driving up costs or putting people out of work. It would be financial folly for a country with China's population to adopt western mechanization. We came to appreciate this approach and to be envious of this manpower resource, the one natural resource where China has an advantage over Canada. Transportation of food was rarely seen during our stay, most of the food being consumed in the area it is produced. Storage of food is minimal. At times huts with thatched roofs were used as granaries. We became more aware of the importance of environmental protection during our stay. We never