On the same plain


From 1988 to 1992, she studied ecology at Lanzhou University. In her sophomore year she conducted field research in a forest. A year later, she got the chance to embark on a study of the grasslands.
"Wandering around the forest is fun, but when I lie down on the grasslands under the blue sky, it feels like home," Xin says.
She recalls a day when she was standing on the grasslands after the rain had stopped, she caught sight of the mountains in the distance layered with different colors-the green grasslands below, then the purple-brown rhododendron bushes, the red bald mountain, followed by its white snow-capped peak topped off with a white cloud hat.
"This image is so etched in my mind that it always reminds me of why I love the grasslands," says Xin.
Throughout her bachelor and doctorate years, she spent her summers visiting many grassland.
"As a 21-year-old I visited the Gannan grasslands. At 22, I went to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Aged 25 to 27 I visited the Songnen Plain, and at 28 I traveled to the grasslands in the mountain regions of southern China. At the age of 29, I was in Hulunbuir," Xin says. "Each grassland has its own personality."
Field work on the grasslands involved a lot of driving, and Xin spent hours chatting with the driver and watching the road.
