Content preview:
Qingqing originally did not belong to Xia Jie. For Qingqing in her girlhood, Xia Jie is an unreachable place. Qingqing, like other people in Chunxiang Village, works at sunrise and stops at sunset. She never thought that she would become a Xia Jie person. If we want to talk about green love, we have to start from Chunxiang Village.
Jinsha River flew down from Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, rushing thousands of miles, and arrived in Yunnan. Suddenly, it stopped, circuitously ran north for nearly a hundred miles, and then suddenly ran south. It seems to be going deep into the hinterland of Yunnan, and it seems that it suddenly got some news, and it quickly moved eastward and went straight into Sichuan. At the southernmost tip of Sichuan, it's like walking too fast, leaving a wasteland, stepping on a small piece of land in southern Sichuan, and then rolling eastward along the Sichuan-Yunnan border.
Chunxiang village is a village on this small piece of land.
Chunxiang Village and Xia Jie Street are actually only one step away. Summer Street is inhabited by some steel workers. Chunxiang village used to be sparsely populated, mostly mountainous. There is only one dam on the bank of Jinsha River, which is suitable for agricultural planting. Villagers gather here to become villages. Later, it was found that the stones in those mountains were all minerals with high iron content, and Chunxiang Village became famous at once. In a few years, the state built a large steel plant here, which was trampled by the Jinsha River in the south of the Yangtze River.