How ‘battlefield’ Hong Kong countryside area marred by land-development saga is taking steps to become a conservation hotspot
- After a long land battle left the natural environment around remote Sha Lo Tung scarred, naturalists are stepping in and wildlife is returning. For now
![The future of Sha Lo Tung, a remote countryside area in Hong Kong that has witnessed a decades-long land-development battle that left the environment around it scarred, appears bright. Photo: Martin Williams](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/05/26/c64af237-a6bd-4536-af97-c3bd52df5f77_f5d85d85.jpg?itok=HGa4E1I9&v=1685087417)
Although Hong Kong’s bucolic Sha Lo Tung area is less than 4km (2.5 miles) from the bustle of Tai Po Market – a satellite town of high-rise residential blocks and shopping malls in Hong Kong’s northeastern New Territories – the only road in is narrow, angling up a wooded hillside before curling around into a small valley, ending just above a burbling stream.
The basin floor spreading out from either side is undulating, and a worn track leads past a fence marking the boundary of an organic farm.
Nearby, a fading information board introduces six of the butterfly species found at Sha Lo Tung, and a couple of minutes beyond, the dirt road ends at the village of Cheung Uk, where around 50 houses cluster beneath a tall forest.
These are small, mainly in the village style typical of rural Hong Kong before the 1970s, each with an indoor living space and a loft for sleeping below the roof. No one lives here now, and most of the houses are in varying stages of decay, with roofs collapsed, brick walls crumbling.
![The derelict village of Cheung Uk, in Sha Lo Tung, in June 1992. Photo: Martin Williams The derelict village of Cheung Uk, in Sha Lo Tung, in June 1992. Photo: Martin Williams](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/05/26/ec89904d-3db4-41ec-a222-7285fcd8e408_788c765c.jpg)
Walk past the first couple of rows, and you might have to look beneath resurgent vegetation to find the ruins of buildings abandoned decades ago.
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