Cotton in Uzbekistan

Coton in Uzbekistan
Autumn is the time of the cotton harvest: Uzbekistan is the world's second-largest cotton exporter and fifth largest producer. Cotton is hand picked and the fields are full of villagers picking Uzbek 'white gold'. Every home around the world has something made of cotton: a shirt, a towel, etc. People mostly try to buy clothes with tags saying ‘Cotton 100%’, which means the best material to wear. There are a lot of technologies of making various artificial textiles. Synthetics are undoubtedly worn longer, washed better and they do not crumple easily. However, they lack what our bodies enjoy - naturalness. Cotton clothes breathe and absorb sweat better than synthetics, which pleases human skin. And, maybe, cotton fabrics are given some unperceivable warmth while they are being made to become ‘a thing that human soul was put into’ as people say? The world’s leading cotton fiber manufacturers are India, China, Uzbekistan, the USA and Pakistan. Cotton is planted with machines. A cotton brush grows to the average height of 70 centimeters; it blossoms and then produces seed capsules - bolls. When the bolls are almost ripe, farmers stop watering the brushes and let them dry. Owing to hot air - the temperature in some Uzbekistan regions reaches +40°C in September when they start harvesting cotton - the bolls crack, open and let white balls of cotton fiber look out. A cotton ball is in the form of a peeled orange; it is dazzling white and four times as big as a boll. If the cotton boll opening is videoed, its fast playback will show it resembles the process of making popcorn - except that a cotton boll opens more neatly, forming a four-sepal calyx cup. Curving out, they look like a jewelry setting with a soft white gem inside. If you have not seen cotton growing ripe, come to Uzbekistan in autumn - it is fascinating. Cotton picking by hand is probably the most laborious and yet exciting stage of cotton textile production. Cotton pickers go to the fields early in the morning, while it is not hot yet. They put on special bags tied at the back and take their ridges. A cotton picker usually moves along a furrow and picks cotton from two ridges on either side. Cotton fiber leaves the cups easily and is thrown into the bag.