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What's it like to live in Urumqi?

My yard has two acres of land, where I plant vegetables and fruit trees (three walnut trees, three jujube trees, Red Fuji, Marshal Huang, two trees, green bananas, apple pears and plum trees). Outside the courtyard wall, my father planted elms and grafted willows, so you will see the branches of elms hanging like willows. There are poplars outside other people's walls, but they grow very tall and the light in the yard is not good. There were sheep in the family. After the college entrance examination, I went to herd sheep. At dawn after five o'clock in the morning, I got up and drove the sheep out. At ten o'clock in the evening, the sun goes down and the sheep are driven home. Go home for lunch at noon. Bring water, cucumbers, apples, steamed bread, and say hello to the German shepherd at home and go up the hill. Sheep don't have to rush, they will follow the grass and eat as they walk. I just lie on the grass, thinking about my own thoughts, watching the clouds, smelling the sun baked sheep dung balls mixed with grass, or chatting with dogs, saying hello to Kazakh riding and grazing not far away, and singing at the top of my voice when I am in a good mood. I played my tongue when I was very young. I learned it from my father. My father learned it from herders, so it is barrier-free to learn Russian.