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Fujian helps PNG innovate with grass

Updated: Feb 18, 2019 Xinhua Print
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African visitors learn about mushroom farming at an agricultural exhibition in Fujian province. [Photo by Zheng Shuai/For china Daily]

PORT MORESBY - At the Goroka Juncao & Dry-land Rice Technology Demonstration Base in Papua New Guinea's Eastern Highlands province, a unique type of grass called "Juncao" stands tall, almost 5 meters high, in the vast fields.

With the help of agricultural specialists from East China's Fujian province, locals are trying to grow rice and mushrooms out of the special wild grass, similar to some fungi grown from tree matter. The grass Juncao, also called "China Grass" by natives, can also be used to feed livestock.

When media reporters arrived at the base one morning in January, villagers were eagerly awaiting. Lin Yingxing, director of the base and a Chinese expert in Juncao and dryland rice technologies, who came to the airport of Goroka to fetch the reporters, got off the jeep promptly.

Addressing villagers in English, Lin said with a big smile: "Welcome, everyone! Today, I'm going to show you around and help you guys to get an idea on how to grow Juncao and rice on your own land."

After a quick greeting with the crowd, Lin soon started his lecture with the help of local young men who can speak English.

Standing in the strong sunlight and bathed in sweat, he attentively explained to the curious crowd on how to plant Juncao, how to smash the giant-sugarcane-like tall grass with a machine, and how to cultivate mushrooms using tubes filled with Juncao powder.

While listening to Lin's introduction, some villagers took notes carefully, some raised questions, and Lin was ready to explain. Occasionally, the crowd burst into laughter and applauded when amused by Lin's humorous answers.

Motuno Chares, a 54-year-old farmer living in Henganofi district, said that he took a truck with some fellows early in the morning and spent one hour on the bumpy road before arriving at the base.

"I grow coffee, cassava and sweet potato to make a living, and my wife does some sewing. Though we work hard, our income is still low. Farm products such as cassava are hard to sell as the market is small. I hope I can learn how to cultivate mushrooms with Juncao technologies. People here like mushrooms, and the price is good," Chares said.

Among the group of visitors were some indigenous women. Priscilla Tonny from Kosionte village of Henganofi district was one of them.

The 34-year-old housewife has two sons and one daughter. "I understand that Juncao can be cut into pieces to feed chicken and goats, and I'm sure that I can master the technology using Juncao tubes to cultivate mushrooms," she said.

Lin said that villagers were always welcome to exchange Juncao tubes from the base with fresh Juncao that they grow.

Timothy Ukii, 48, works as a project official at the Eco-enterprise Division of Natural Resources under the EHP Administration.

"By this way, the Juncao technology can be spread and the program would be sustainable. And the Chinese are helping us to build more technology bases," said Ukii.

Amazingly, Juncao, which is also called by local villagers in EHP as "Lin Grass", can easily grow to about five meters high in EHP, much higher than those in other places. Lin said the gifted fertile soil and good weather conditions here might be the key.

Juncao technology was first introduced into Papua New Guinea from China in 1997. In 1998, the inventor of Juncao and dry-land rice technology, Professor Lin Zhanxi from Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, led a team to visit EHP and afterwards established the first pilot base in Lufa district of EHP.

Kopi Manove received Lin in 1998. It was at his backyard that Lin planted dry-land rice for the first time to see if it was suitable to grow in Papua New Guinea. The results were cheerful. "Later, the dry-land rice of Gold Mountain No 1 even had a record production of as high as 8.5 tons per hectare," 65-year-old Manove recalled excitedly.

Kopi's daughter Priscilla planned to grow more rice on her father's farmland and build a shed to grow mushrooms. "People in EHP do need rice as a staple food. But so far our country depends highly on imports. If we grow rice by ourselves, what a fortune we can save," she said.

According to Lin Yingxing, the Chinese government listed the Juncao technology program in EHP as an aid program in 1998. EHP became the sister province of Fujian in 2000. Since then, the Chinese side kept sending experts to Papua New Guinea to pass on the technologies.

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