The village of almost 3000 farmers overlooks downtown Chongqing, the centre of China's biggest municipality where 30 million people live alongside China's biggest river, the Yangtze.
Chongqing, an ancient port established in 1000BC, was part of Sichuan province until 1997. It was given self-governing municipal status to hasten development, part of China's ambitious "Go West" program to reduce the growing gap between its poor rural west and the prosperous eastern provinces.
But despite billions of yuan in investment from the downstream Three Gorges dam and Go West, Chongqing's worst drought in a century has left the Yangtze and its tributaries at record lows.
The drought is disrupting shipping, leaving millions of people and livestock without drinking water and costing more than $US1.1 billion ($A1.3 billion) in economic losses so far, strangling efforts to improve the lives of farmers such as Mr Chen and the 1.5 million people displaced by the building of the dam.
Mr Chen has heard of global warming, but he doesn't know whether that — or the gigantic dam — is to blame for the drought and rising temperatures. What he does know is that every year Chongqing, long dubbed one of China's three "furnaces" for its searing summers, is getting warmer.
Since the 1950s, Chongqing has had 16 summers with temperatures higher than 40 degrees for up to five days in a row. Last year, it had 20 days straight of 40 degrees-plus.