Mountain Life in Naxi Stone City (Part II): Stewards of the Land

Editor’s Note

I first met Jiang Ziqi at a book fair in Hangzhou in 2023, where she invited the Farmer Seed Network to give a talk on seed saving. At the time, I learned that she and some of her partners in Hangzhou cultivated their own small vegetable gardens and shared a deep interest in seeds. Later, I discovered that Ziqi had applied for Foodthink’s ecological agriculture internship programme. As the Farmer Seed Network was coincidentally recruiting village-based interns for Stone City through the same programme, arrangements were made for Ziqi to choose Stone City as her internship site. This led to the observations, stories, and reflections recorded in this article. This August, Ziqi “bid a temporary farewell” to Stone City to pursue her studies in Hong Kong. However, as she put it, her experience in Stone City “will not simply fade into the river of time”. We welcome more partners who, like her, are interested in community ecological culture to come to Stone City to live, experience, and intern.

— Farmer Seed Network

 

Before coming here, my colleagues at the Farmer Seed Network told me that in the villages where they run projects, it is usually the women who take part in seed saving and the conservation of heirloom varieties. I arrived with many questions about them, only to find that the ordinary, intricately woven threads of daily life provided the answers. The old family structure of “men farming and women weaving” no longer exists. In an era of rapid urban development, self-sufficient production in the village can no longer meet economic needs. Now, rural family structures have shifted increasingly towards “men working and women farming”; typically, men leave for nearby towns to find employment, while women remain at home as caregivers. They must look after elderly parents and young children while simultaneously bearing the burden of agricultural labour. At home, their identities as caregivers and producers are inseparable; from the soil to the dinner table, their toil is simply a part of their daily existence. Yet, in these remote mountains where transport is difficult, the income earned from farming at home is far lower than that of urban labour. For the smallholder, agricultural production in the village still “makes no money”.

● Sister Xiuyun shells maize seeds in preparation for this year’s sowing.
● Sister Ruizhen in her wheat field, carrying her young grandson on her back.
However, the reality of “making no money” in the village has shifted in Stone City due to the growth of tourism over the last twenty years, which has driven economic development to some extent. Over the past decade or so, many families have gradually renovated their homes and opened guesthouses or inns. For most of these families, running a guesthouse has allowed the women to transform their care work (unpaid reproductive labour) into economic value (paid productive labour). Cleaning, making beds, cooking, and washing dishes—tasks these women performed daily at home—have become paid services for tourists under the guesthouse model. Several of the key women from the Farmer Seed Network I spent time with in Stone City are engaged in the service industry in various ways, alongside their farm work. Zhang Xiuyun is currently the manager of the Lishi Hotel (Stone City branch), while Xiuqin and Secretary Mu’s family have long operated a family guesthouse. Although Li Ruizhen has less free time now that she is caring for her young grandson, she occasionally works as a village chef; a few years ago, before her grandson was born, she managed a guesthouse for another household. Furthermore, the produce from the women’s gardening, pig rearing, wine brewing, and oil pressing has found its way onto tourists’ tables, providing an additional source of income for their families.

I. Their Fields and Their Homes

Because I stayed with Secretary Mu and Sister Xiuqin, Xiuqin became the person I spent the most time with each day. Three years ago, she underwent major surgery on her knee. The recovery was slow, and she struggled with mobility for a long time. While her condition has improved over the last two years, she can no longer trek down the long, steep mountain paths to work the fields. Although several mu of the family’s contracted land have been left fallow, Sister Xiuqin is still busy every day on her private kitchen plot, carrying full baskets back and forth between the garden and the house. Previously, when her leg prevented her from reaching the fields, her balcony became an experimental garden; besides flowers, it was filled with various aubergines, chillies, strawberries, and more. Vegetables are planted and harvested in her plot throughout the year: once the radishes are pulled from one patch, another is planted; once the cucumbers fruit in one spot, a new patch is started. Twenty to thirty different crops are grown there in a continuous cycle, providing vegetables for the table and fodder for the livestock.

● Sister Xiuqin’s balcony is also densely planted.

Beyond running the family guesthouse, Sister Xiuqin is also the village doctor. Her home serves as the village clinic, where people frequently come for medicine or injections. Once, she was the last midwife in the village. Sister Xiuqin did not attend school as a child; it was only at seventeen that she went to Lijiang for a vocational secondary medical degree. She told me how much she regretted not studying earlier, as learning to read and write proved incredibly difficult. Because her mother wanted the children to be educated, her older brother and sister went to school, but she had been reluctant, finding it hard and fearing the teachers, who would shout and beat students with stinging nettles—the pain of which would last for a day and a night. Her most vivid memory was of a teacher saying: “When the Four Modernisations arrive in the year 2000, if you people don’t study hard, the cars will drive in, and you’ll be left here carrying baskets of manure, stepping aside to let the cars pass.” Yet, surprisingly, more than twenty years have passed since the “Four Modernisations of 2000” the teacher spoke of, and the villagers are still carrying baskets of manure to the fields. Although cars have indeed arrived, they can only park in the lot at the top of the village; essential supplies and agricultural produce are still moved in and out on the backs of people and horses.

● A carrying basket sewn by Sister Xiuqin from old clothes.
● Sister Xiuqin visiting an elderly woman to give her an injection.

Sister Xiuqin began learning midwifery around 1987 and delivered roughly three to four hundred babies in the village until 2005. While training at the town health centre, doctors had the interns practice on women undergoing induced labours. During the family planning era, women caught for exceeding birth quotas—even those eight or nine months pregnant—were forced to undergo induction. Such cases were common; one or two occurred daily at the health centre. Sister Xiuqin told me about one woman who, while waiting for a busy doctor, had her water break; she kept quiet to save the child, endured the agony, and secretly slipped out into the fields at night to give birth. In the past, women here gave birth at home because roads had not yet reached the village. Once the roads arrived, people began leaving the village, and births moved to hospitals. However, childbirth costs of around 10,000 yuan, without insurance coverage, now place a significant burden on village families.

Sister Xiuqin is exceptionally gentle and never loses her temper, though she seems to lack confidence. She often says, “I can’t do anything,” “I’m the most useless person,” or “I’m the worst at dancing,” adding, “Everyone else is so much more capable.” Yet, while saying this, she silently takes on all the housework: waking up early for the kitchen, preparing three meals a day, feeding the pigs and chickens three times, washing dishes, cleaning, farming the vegetable plot, and sorting vegetables at home. To her, cooking and cleaning aren’t “real work”; only labouring in the fields counts. In Naxi tradition, men do not enter the kitchen. As with many other ethnic villages, men typically earn money or handle major affairs—for instance, rituals to pray for rain or honour heaven are forbidden to women. Men rarely concern themselves with the heavy, tedious domestic chores, yet women must still carry heavy back-baskets along steep mountain paths. Perhaps the women of the village, like Sister Xiuqin, have not yet realised how vital their domestic labour is. It is precisely because of her tedious efforts—cooking, washing, sorting vegetables—that the land and the dining table are truly connected; it is their uncelebrated daily labour that sustains the vitality of the land and the ordinary lives of their families.

● Sister Xiuqin chopping pig fodder.
● Sister Xiuqin’s dining table.

I saw many admirable qualities in the other women I met in the village. Zhang Xiuyun is known as the “Corn Mother”. She grows over a dozen heirloom maize varieties in her field and has developed several of her own waxy maize varieties through hybridisation. As the manager of the Lishi Hotel in Stone City, Sister Xiuyun manages a hotel while also tending several mu of land, yet she always smiles with an optimistic, hearty laugh, believing that farm work is not arduous, but joyful. Her maiden home is in Hailong Village, further downstream on the Jinsha River, a three-hour drive from Stone City. She told me that when the roads were not yet built, she once carried her newborn eldest son on her back to her parents’ home—a journey that took two days on foot. Women like Sister Xiuyun, who marry far from home, often migrate with seeds during their journeys between their marital and natal homes. In her parents’ garden, she grows “Xiuyun No. 1”, her own hybrid waxy maize. In her wheat field, she grows Shandong wheat brought back by a cousin who married into a family in Shandong. In May this year, with the support of the Farmer Seed Network, Sister Xiuyun visited the Potato Park in Peru, where she observed traditional maize and potato varieties of all shapes and sizes. However, if traditional local varieties travel halfway across the globe, they may not adapt to the new soil and climate. Therefore, in her seed trials, Sister Xiuyun carefully observes and selects the best seeds before sowing to ensure every grain is full of vitality. This is how seeds flow, following the footsteps of people.

● Over a dozen varieties of maize hanging in Sister Xiuyun’s home.
● Eating roasted maize by the hearth at Sister Xiuyun’s parents’ home; this is the “Xiuyun No. 1” she bred.
● The colourful varieties of maize and potatoes preserved by Sister Xiuyun.

When I first arrived in Stone City, I brought several packets of heirloom tomato, lettuce, and basil seeds—varieties foreign to this region. After experimenting on my small balcony at home for a few years, I planted them in the mountain soil of Stone City. Under the abundant sunshine, the tomatoes grew particularly strong. After three months of seedling care, transplanting, staking, and fertilising, I finally enjoyed the rich flavour of home-grown tomatoes. The sweet basil, originally from Europe, was a taste unknown to this land and its people, yet it proved very popular; Sister Xiuqin often adds a few leaves to her dishes, adding variety to the table. These “new varieties” are being saved in Sister Xiuqin’s vegetable garden; perhaps they will persist on these mountains long after I have left.

● Tomatoes planted in April; the harvest began between late July and early August.
● September: the tomato harvest continues. Sister Xiuqin sent me a photo, though unfortunately, I am no longer there to taste them.

II. Secretary Mu and his Nostalgia

Secretary Mu Wenchuan of Stone City is a unique man. My first impression of him was the sound of his footsteps; I could often hear him jogging in place in the courtyard early in the morning. He has set himself a goal of at least 25,000 steps a day, so whenever he has a free moment, he jogs with his phone in hand. He never fails to meet his target, even if it means jogging in place to ensure every step is counted.

● Secretary Mu standing at the entrance of the village committee office after leading me on a hike to Taiziguan.

Secretary Mu’s story begins in 1993. At just 19 years old, a twist of fate led him into the tourism industry, where he began leading foreign hiking groups through his village. The route took them from Stone City through Taiziguan, trekking from the towering mountains beside the Jinsha River all the way to Lugu Lake. Even then, foreigners were drawn to this unknown, exotic land—perhaps because Joseph Rock had already revealed the mysteries of the beautiful ancient Naxi Kingdom to the West back in the 1930s. Consequently, foreign trekking enthusiasts set foot here long before Chinese tourists did. As a local guide, Secretary Mu learned English early on to communicate with these visitors from afar. It was during his early days as a guide and the operator of a family guesthouse that Stone City’s tourism began to grow, driven by these foreign hikers. After 2000, Secretary Mu served as the village head of Stone City and was later elected Secretary of Baoshan administrative village. He holds firm views on the development of rural cultural tourism. He is acutely aware of the destruction that rapid, large-scale investment would wreak upon the village’s way of life and its ecology. He has always believed that things must be kept small and slow to truly endure.

● A young Secretary Mu in Daocheng Yading. Photo: Mu Wenchuan, taken in winter 1990.

He is just as sincere in his dealings with others, though he does love to joke. Secretary Mu often says, “My humble temple is too small to accommodate the likes of you from the big cities.” I know this stems from the fact that he has seen too many people come and go through Stone City. Whether they are tourists stopping for a short while, students and scholars conducting research, or interns and volunteers like me who come for a period through a non-profit organisation, there is always a stream of outsiders arriving for various reasons. Throughout July, I joined Secretary Mu in hosting several groups of visitors. Some arrived with specific expectations or preconceptions about the place, and some felt a sense of loss when the reality failed to meet those hopes. Today, the countryside has become a “field” for various academic disciplines, arts, and the cultural tourism industry; but for those who have always lived here, this “field” is their home. Regardless of the changes they bring, the outsiders simply pass through and leave. Yet Secretary Mu is well aware of the dangers the village faces. Like many other mountain villages, the young people who leave for education and work no longer return to the hardship of farming. The youngest farming labourers in the village are already over 50. In this generational divide between urban and rural life, the indigenous wisdom of cultivation is becoming increasingly difficult to pass on.

● Secretary Mu and Mr Yang Lixin from the Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, exchanging ideas at the seed bank in Stone City.

When I first arrived in Stone City and went for walks along the mountain paths with Secretary Mu, he would often pluck various wild plants by the roadside to tell me about their uses and medicinal properties. At the time, he mentioned that it had long been his wish to organise and record these plants. I, too, began to pay closer attention to the diverse flora in the mountains and fields, learning their Naxi names and various uses from them. Eventually, we decided to collaborate on collecting and documenting the local wild plants of Stone City, aiming for 50 of the most common and useful species, which we then compiled into a small booklet. Secretary Mu believes that even if the fields are eventually left untended, these wild plants will continue to grow in the mountain terrain they have already adapted to. For me, getting to know these plants is, in essence, getting to know a way of living and working unique to this place. When I began to instinctively grab a handful of “hua zhan” (Rumex hastatus) leaves from the roadside to rub onto a mosquito bite, I felt as though I had established a deeper connection with the local land.

● Rumex hastatus, which has anti-inflammatory and anti-itch properties. The tender leaves can be fed to pigs and were previously eaten as wild vegetables.

For Secretary Mu, the village has changed immensely over the last thirty years. Roads were built, electricity arrived, and homes were filled with modern appliances like refrigerators, washing machines, and rice cookers. Yet, along with this progress, many of the ways of life from his childhood vanished, becoming the source of the nostalgia he often reflects upon. Secretary Mu is a gifted writer and frequently pens short essays of a thousand words, recounting stories from his memory: recollections of lunches in the fields, the cacti of Stone City, and the games of skipping stones from his youth. He even wrote an article for me titled “Sowing and Integrating”. I made a pact with him that once he had completed twenty pieces, I would produce a small book for him. I have always loved the process of bookmaking; whether it is a small guide to the wild plants of Stone City or a collection of Secretary Mu’s nostalgia, a physical book serves as a vessel for friendship.

● “A Small Guide to Local Wild Plants of Stone City.”
● The foreword written by Secretary Mu for the Small Guide to Local Wild Plants of Stone City.

III. Afterword

Mid-August arrived, and with it, the time to say goodbye. That morning, Secretary Mu saw us to the car park at the top of the village. Xiuyun happened to be travelling the same way; an elderly woman she had met when I accompanied her to her parental home had passed away, and she and her sister were rushing back to pay their respects. Liqiu had also just arrived, carrying a load of freshly harvested walnuts from her home, hoping the lorry could take them to Lijiang to be sold. Before I left, Liqiu stuffed a large handful of walnuts into the gaps in my backpack. I felt like a daughter of the village setting off on a long journey, my bags filled with walnut oil and termite mushroom oil made by Xiuqin, Cape gooseberry seeds from her home, and corn seeds from Xiuyun. Although I had come and gone several times over the past few months, this particular departure felt heavier. As the car reached the halfway point up the mountain, I could still see Secretary Mu in the distance, walking slowly along the road back towards the village committee office. The road we had walked together so many times, the mountain scenery I had come to know so well, the plants, and the stories of the people—all of it had become a tangible and profound imprint within me, one that will not fade with the passing of time.

● I joined the village women in wearing Naxi dress to perform the *da tiao* (traditional dance). (I was wearing Xiuqin’s clothes; we weren’t dressed for a festival that day, but rather because tourists had paid the women to dance in their traditional ethnic attire).

Foodthink Author

Jiang Ziqi

I have long pursued art-related creation and work in my spare time, often finding myself naturally drawn to various “groups” or “collectives”. Over the past few years, sparked by growing tomatoes on my balcony, I began to take an interest in agriculture, the land, and seeds, and have come to more deeply cherish the relationships between myself, the people around me, and other species. This year, my life has spanned from Hangzhou to Yunnan and Hong Kong, as I continue to learn from people of diverse backgrounds. I hope that in time, I can lead a life of truly farming a piece of land, learning from and drawing sustenance from the earth.

 

 

What are the views of the universe, nature, and life held by the villagers of Stone City?

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Discover the culture of the Naxi people

About the Agroecology Internship Programme

The “Agroecology Internship Programme” was launched by Foodthink in 2021. It aims to support young people aspiring to work in agroecology and established ecological farms, enabling young people to master farming knowledge and techniques through practice while helping to summarise and pass on the experience of veteran farmers. In doing so, the programme provides farms with high-quality talent and injects vitality into rural communities.

To date, three recruitment cycles have been completed, supporting over 60 participants in internships lasting from three months to a year across more than ten ecological farms nationwide.

Unless otherwise noted, all illustrations in this article were photographed by the author

Editors: Guan Qi, Mei Ying