Profile: Deliveryman braves frigid cold sending water to remote villages

Source: Xinhua| 2020-01-20 19:00:32|Editor: Xiang Bo
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CHANGCHUN, Jan. 20 (Xinhua) -- Every trip, water deliveryman Huang Weidong and his two colleagues will drive a two-carriage train to deliver drinking water to remote water-deficient villages in the city of Baishan in northeast China's Jilin Province.

Days of heavy snowfall laid thick on the ground. Huang, 53, started his preparation work at around 8:00 a.m. in the morning.

He first ignited a small piece of cotton and bent down toward the outlet of the water tank to melt the ice on it.

"The outlet easily gets frozen due to cold weather. I need to stop in every village to melt the ice," said Huang.

The water deliveryman then climbed to the top of the train carriage and used a steel pipe to fill the water tank with clean spring water.

"The township of Quanyang has rich mineral water resources, and you can drink the water without filtering it," said Huang.

"Sometimes we need to deliver water at night when the temperatures are as low as minus 30 or 40 degrees," he said.

After preparations, at 10:20 a.m., Huang and his colleagues departed for the villages, a journey that often lasts two days.

These villages, with an average elevation of 600 meters, have complicated geological conditions. The well water is not up to drinking standards.

In 1975, the local railway department decided to deliver water by train to villagers near the Quanyang Station.

Huang is a fourth-generation water deliveryman of the station. He has worked there for six years, and each year he makes 100 round trips.

"We suffer most in winter," Huang said while pointing to his soaked shoes and frozen cotton clothes.

"Once my colleague's hands got stuck to the handrail due to the cold weather," Huang recalled.

After less than two hours, Huang and his colleagues stopped at the Lushuihe Station for a quick lunch. Bread, sausages and cold mineral water made up their meal.

"Food easily gets cold in winter and rotten in summer. The most convenient food is bread," said Du Hongfeng, one of the two train drivers.

When the train arrived at Huojugou village at 12:20 p.m., several villagers were already there.

"It is really a hard journey to deliver us the drinking water. It is precious," said Tian He, a villager in Huojugou. "We only use it for cooking."

"We use snow water in winter and river water in summer for washing ourselves, our clothes and feeding livestock," said Tian.

Tian used to be a railway worker. After retirement, Tian raised several cows and chickens at home. Because of the lack of water, most of his neighbors have gradually moved away in recent years.

"Only six or seven households are still living in the village," Tian said.

"Even if there was only one household left, I would stick to my job and deliver water to those in need," Huang said on his way back.

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