Orchid cultivation in China

Short, boring article, but the real bomb is the last line. Orchids as
religion???

Orchid sales volume hits annual 100 bln yuan in China

The orchid cultivation industry has been enjoying fast development in
China, with annual sales hitting 100 billion yuan (about 12.3 billion US
dollars), said sources with the China Orchid Culture Forum held Sunday
in a central China city.

The people in China have a long history of favoring orchids, which are
historical symbols of lofty character and noble sentiment in literature,
poetry and painting.

China has so far set up more than 1,000 orchid associations at various
levels nationwide, and orchid fans number some 5 million, said the China
Orchid Association at the forum held in Yichang, a city in central
China's Hubei province.

The country has set up more than about 60 websites specializing in
glorifying orchid culture and boosting orchid trade.

Over 50 orchid experts from Hubei, Sichuan, Zhejiang, Fujian and
Guangdong provinces, the country's major orchid producers, gathered at
the forum to confer on the further development of the country's orchid
cultivation sector.

They held that advocating orchid culture will help improve moral
standards and the public's temperament.

--
--
Reka

This is LIFE! It's not a rehearsal. Don't miss it!
http://www.rolbox.it/hukari/index.html
Reka Hukari Ranigler [ Mi, 19 Oktober 2005 06:51 ] [ ID #61784 ]

Re: Orchid cultivation in China

That's what's wrong with America: not enough orchids. Let's advocate
improving family values by mandating that every family must have at least 2
orchids, the required amount to be increased on an annual basis.
Psychologists and psychiatrists should regularly prescribe orchids for a
variety of ailments, and as a result pharmacies should start selling
orchids, just as grocery stores already do. Those who do not own orchids yet
will probably need to be treated for orchidophobia first, but surely they
will realize the error of their ways, and meekly accept the orchids taking
over their lives. Long live orchids!

Joanna

"Reka" <rhukari [at] rolmail.net> wrote in message
news:MPG.1dbfef55e8f879cf9896a1 [at] news.rolmail.net...
> Short, boring article, but the real bomb is the last line. Orchids as
> religion???
>
> Orchid sales volume hits annual 100 bln yuan in China
>
> The orchid cultivation industry has been enjoying fast development in
> China, with annual sales hitting 100 billion yuan (about 12.3 billion US
> dollars), said sources with the China Orchid Culture Forum held Sunday
> in a central China city.
>
> The people in China have a long history of favoring orchids, which are
> historical symbols of lofty character and noble sentiment in literature,
> poetry and painting.
>
> China has so far set up more than 1,000 orchid associations at various
> levels nationwide, and orchid fans number some 5 million, said the China
> Orchid Association at the forum held in Yichang, a city in central
> China's Hubei province.
>
> The country has set up more than about 60 websites specializing in
> glorifying orchid culture and boosting orchid trade.
>
> Over 50 orchid experts from Hubei, Sichuan, Zhejiang, Fujian and
> Guangdong provinces, the country's major orchid producers, gathered at
> the forum to confer on the further development of the country's orchid
> cultivation sector.
>
> They held that advocating orchid culture will help improve moral
> standards and the public's temperament.
>
> --
> --
> Reka
>
> This is LIFE! It's not a rehearsal. Don't miss it!
> http://www.rolbox.it/hukari/index.html
J Fortuna [ Mi, 19 Oktober 2005 13:29 ] [ ID #61786 ]

Re: Orchid cultivation in China

Reka wrote:
> Short, boring article, but the real bomb is the last line. Orchids as
> religion???....


>
> >
> They held that advocating orchid culture will help improve moral
> standards and the public's temperament.


What are you talking about? Why would this statement necessarily have
anything to do with religion? Morality and good behavior are not
synonymous with religion.

Right conduct has been a chinese concern since the time of Confucius.
That the Chinese authorities would couch their advocacy of orchid
culture in such terms is not at all unusual. In fact, it is typically
chinese.

J. Del Col
delcolja [ Mi, 19 Oktober 2005 14:46 ] [ ID #61787 ]

Re: Orchid cultivation in China

"J Fortuna" <joanna [at] REMOVEfortunabujard.com> wrote in message
news:C6q5f.4699$t12.3742 [at] trnddc03...
> That's what's wrong with America: not enough orchids. Let's advocate
> improving family values by mandating that every family must have at least
> 2
> orchids, the required amount to be increased on an annual basis.

Hey, why not make it two per parent and one per child, with the stipulation
that both of the parents must teach their kids about orchid culture. Just
think what impact all that contact between parents and their kids could
have. But I think I'd supplement it by requiring families to ensure that
their kids start caring for animals no later than when they're ten years
old, and continue for at least five years. This could be with their own
pets or volunteering at the nearest SPCA or veterinarian clinic or hospital.
I say this because two of my nephews are the same age (now young men), and
one cared for up to three dozen rabbits at a time from the time he was a
pre-teen until he finished secondary school. The other did not. Their
upbringing was pretty much the same otherwise. The nephew who raised the
rabbits is incredibly patient, considerte and kind, especially with kids,
while the other is not. The only explanation that occurs to me is that the
one who did not take care of animals, usd that time to focus on his own
needs and desires while the other learned to care for living things that
were dependant on him for all of their needs, and the consideration learned
ended up being extended to other human beings, especially young children.
And he had MUCH MUCH less time to focus on his own needs and desires. I
don't think merely demonstrating such care and consideration is enough since
both of my sisters had cats while the boys were growing up and well modeled
such nurturing behaviours both in the care of their kids and in the care of
their animals. The kids need opportunity to put such instruction into
practice.

I think caring for orchids may have substantial benefit with regard to
promoting family values, especially if children have to pay for the plants,
or replacement plants when they kill a plant, and for things like potting
media and fertilizer. Whether caring for plants or animals, the kids and
parents would have to study the plant or animal and learn about what it
needs. Perhaps experienced parents could ad wisdom here as I speak only as
a largely objective observer, having no wife or kids of my own.

It would be interesting to see whether the Chinese initiative is effective,
and it would be equally interesting to see, or at least speculate on, the
potential impact of the orchid industry promoting such a concept in the
west. How much would the orchid industry grow? What impact on social
institutions would be observed? It would also be of interest to learn why
'family values' remain a concern in China while they remain of concern in
the west primarily in faith communities. Perhaps, in its hostility toward
faith, the secular west has discarded the related family values also. But I
don't want to spend significant time on this question at this time. I offer
this just as food for thought.

Cheers,

Ted


--
R.E. (Ted) Byers, Ph.D., Ed.D.
R & D Decision Support Solutions
http://www.randddecisionsupportsolutions.com/
Healthy Living Through Informed Decision Making
Ted Byers [ Mi, 19 Oktober 2005 18:18 ] [ ID #61789 ]

Re: Orchid cultivation in China

jadel wrote:
> Reka wrote:
>> Short, boring article, but the real bomb is the last line. Orchids as
>> religion???....
>
>
>> They held that advocating orchid culture will help improve moral
>> standards and the public's temperament.
>
>
> What are you talking about? Why would this statement necessarily have
> anything to do with religion? Morality and good behavior are not
> synonymous with religion.
>
> Right conduct has been a chinese concern since the time of Confucius.
> That the Chinese authorities would couch their advocacy of orchid
> culture in such terms is not at all unusual. In fact, it is typically
> chinese.
>
> J. Del Col
>
J.,
I am quite cognizant of the fact that Chinese culture has been more
civilized than ours has, and that for much longer. Yet the Chinese
authorities are certainly different than in Confucius' age. For me it
was more of a question of religion such as in "opium of the people".

--
Reka

This is LIFE! It's not a rehearsal. Don't miss it!
http://www.rolbox.it/hukari/index.html
Reka [ Mi, 19 Oktober 2005 21:21 ] [ ID #61791 ]
Miscellaneous / Verschiedenes » rec.gardens.orchids » Orchid cultivation in China

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