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In step with the steppe

Updated: Aug 9, 2018 By Satarupa Bhattacharjya in Ordos, Inner Mongolia | China Daily By Satarupa Bhattacharjya in Ordos, Inner Mongolia | China Daily Print
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Some of Inner Mongolia's pastoral herders, whose ancestors led nomadic lives, are raising livestock in modern ways.

Vast stretches along Expressway 216, which connects urban Ordos to its rural Otog Front Banner, lie uninhabited. More animals than people can be found in this part of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region where trucks carrying coal are often the only sighted vehicles on the highway.

Other than its coal reserves, which are among the world's largest, the region produces mutton, milk and wool. It has iron ore and rare earth, and among more modern industries, wind and solar power. Lately, it has gotten into data mining.

China Daily's recent interviews with local pastoral herders and officials in two villages of the Otog Front Banner suggest that the modernization of livestock production and management is underway. Alongside, traditional lifestyles of the once nomadic people are changing.

The prefecture-level city of Ordos, located in the region's south, has an area of more than 85,000 square kilometers but a population size of just 2 million or so. With a dominant Han population, and around 11 percent Mongolian, the ethnic mix includes Manchu and Hui groups.Ethnic Mongolians comprise 30 percent of the banner's population of 78,000, with the majority estimated to be involved in raising livestock and agricultural activities. The banner, which was established in 1980, has 68 villages and four towns.

More than 2 million domestic animals, mostly sheep, are raised each year, according to local government officials.

The outside world has long associated Inner Mongolia with images of wild horses running through the grasslands. But horse racing, the popular recreational sport in the region, appears to be more relevant to the tourism industry today than to society.

The banner had 2,913 horses in 2016. In 1975, there were more than 2 million horses in the region.

The annual Naadam festival has kept Inner Mongolia's equestrian tradition alive though.

A similar story is that of yurts, or the tent dwellings, which used to be made from a woolen fabric and wood. Many years ago, nomadic groups in the region would dismantle them and carry along the parts from place to place as they explored the steppe.

The present-day yurts in the banner, for instance, have concrete bases and serve as hotels in summer where visitors can experience Mongolian culture.It is late afternoon in Tabantaolegai village when Wangchuge decides to survey the grounds on which his sheep are grazing. But instead of walking through sandy fields to gather the animals from different corners, he monitors them on a TV screen from inside a modern yurt.

The herder, who runs a family business of raising sheep for meat and wool, says he sells an average of 300 sheep a year.

A video camera he has placed on the roof of his house provides him with real-time feed of animal movements on his plot of land, which is large.

"Traditional methods of raising sheep have disappeared (in his village)," Wangchuge, 41, says as he slices salted mutton, a Mongolian delicacy.

"The use of technology has helped reduce both labor and time."

He owns six cows as well, but mainly for milk.

This village in the Otog Front Banner has 175 permanent resident families, many of whom keep sheep and grow corn and a variety of rice.

Wangchuge says somewhere on his farm he has set up tanks with drinking water for his sheep that automatically adjust temperatures.

He is keen to develop an earmark but doesn't specify if it would be digital.

"After a sheep is born and earmarked, we will be able to keep daily logs on its intake of grass and water. This will make consumers feel safe about buying the meat," he says.

The banner is among 33 such administrative subdivisions in Inner Mongolia where livestock production is a major economic activity.

"We are trying to develop modern animal husbandry and agriculture that are both eco-friendly and profitable," a senior local official says, adding that the industries generated 2.2 billion yuan ($348 million) in 2016.

He didn't want to be identified by name as he was speaking on behalf of his team.

An ecological concern has been the degradation of the grasslands, partly owing to overgrazing.

In 2013, the region launched some protection measures and since has tried to restrict active grazing to nine months in a year.Bixiriletu, a 40-year-old resident of Angsu, another village in the Otog Front Banner, grew up watching his parents herd their sheep to grasslands far from home. In the past few years, he had to wake up nightly to check on his animals.

Now, he has the tools - a camera and a smartphone.

Bixiriletu worked at a coal mine in the banner for much of his adult life. In 2012, he watched a TV program on artificial insemination in sheep. The show, he says gave him the idea of visiting a breeding facility in Ulanqab, which is also located in the region's south.

US tech giant Apple Inc is reportedly looking to set up a cloud hub in the city, its second in China after the southwestern province of Guizhou.

"The donors (sperm) are foreign," he says of the meat-producing Dorper, the South African hybrid sheep that was developed for arid conditions similar to Ordos.

The mixing of foreign and local breeds, Bixiriletu says, has meant shorter waiting periods."It takes from six to seven months for the local sheep to be ready for an abattoir but for the hybrids, it's from four to five months."

Some 200 families reside in Angsu.

In the 1990s, Mengkebayaer, who is from the same village, was a musician with a Mongolian folk troupe in Dalian in Northeast China's Liaoning province. He got married and returned to Inner Mongolia in 2000, when his village didn't have electricity.

His siblings gave him 40 sheep to start his livestock business, and soon he saw profits roll in, he says.

His parents had settled down in Angsu in the 1940s, in the same decade the autonomous region came into begin.

"When I got married, I couldn't have imagined that my village would have electricity. Then we got it, then we got roads, and now online connectivity," Mengkebayaer, 44, says.

The first light bulbs were lit in Angsu in 2006.

He makes about 400,000 yuan a year from his various businesses that include livestock, diary items, corn and rice, and tourism.

"Irrigation can be controlled remotely" he says of the overhead water pipes fitted on farmlands in the banner.

He aims to register a trademark to sell his products online. Meanwhile, he plays the shudraga, a Mongolian instrument, when he gets the time.

Some ethnic Mongolians use lone names.

More than a decade ago, Angsu also witnessed the arrival of sowing machines. The village's Party chief, Suyalaqiqige, was among the early adopters, who used the machines to plant corn and rice. She was a traditional sheep herder in her teens.

While modernization of livestock management and agriculture may have made her life easier, it has led to the loss of human interaction, such as conversations with fellow herders when watching over their sheep. Nonetheless, the old way of grazing was time-consuming.

Sitting in her house underneath a portrait of Genghis Khan, the founder of the Mongol Empire and the most revered figure in the ethnic Mongolian community in China, Suyalaqiqige says, as she sees it, the biggest change in her village has been the mechanization of agriculture.

A delegate to the Ordos People's Congress since 2013, her role includes helping local herders get better access to public services and promoting government policy. But despite her village's strides in modernization, she recognizes some challenges that remain.

"There are asphalt roads connecting villages (in the larger area) but not all herders' families. If this is solved, it would be more convenient for them to travel and sell their products outside," Suyalaqiqige, 51, says, speaking through a Mongolian translator.

Many villagers hire trucks to transport goods to markets and at times buyers come to the village.

Other than infrastructure and transport requirements, protecting the grasslands is a priority.

Local herders have started to divide plots for their sheep to graze, and the emphasis is on quality breeds, so that the numbers can be reduced, she says.

Most herders interviewed in the Otog Front Banner said they come from families that once led nomadic lives.

Now, even as the newer generations welcome changes in their work and lifestyles, they will likely continue to pursue their cultural traditions.

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