Joy and sorrow of monkey trainers
Updated: 2014-10-21 15:51
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
Yang Lingui plays with his monkey in Xinye county, Henan province, Oct 13, 2014. [Photo/CFP] |
Bao Qingshan, 47, who is a monkey according to Chinese Zodiac, has been training monkeys and performing with them for more than 30 years. But he finds the job increasingly difficult to pursue these days.
Bao, his brother Bao Fengshan and four other trainers from Xinye county, Henan province, which is famous for its monkey tricks, were detained for holding a show on a street in Mudanjiang city, Heilongjiang province. The police said the six had no "wild animal transportation license".
In Baowan village, Bao's hometown, more than 1,000 people earn their living by holding money shows around the country. They travel around China for most part of the year and only return for autumn harvest and Spring Festival.
They train these animals and display tricks for money. Yang Lingui, 58, also a trainer, said they can make more than 100 yuan a day.
"We earn much more doing this than farming, which is why almost every household is in this profession." This makes their village financially better off than neighboring villages.
Culture insider: 10 types of residential houses across China |
Special: Traditional handicrafts under threat |
- Yang Jiechi meets with US National Security Advisor
- Chinese power couple's art on display at UN
- Lenses on wedding: From me to us
- Cui Tiankai visits exhibition on WWII
- The capital's biggest pizza party
- China, Russia hold anti-terror drill
- Highlights of Shanghai Fashion Week
- Step up the battle against HIV/AIDS, urges first lady
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
CPC Fourth Plenary Session |
Innovative Asia |
Tourists set to travel light overseas |
Cold comfort for former sex slaves |
Poverty in China |
Exams that baffle best test-takers |
Today's Top News
New services for Chinese small businesses
PBOC official gets ready 'to assume helm' at ABC
China launches remote sensing satellite
Treasured Chinese scroll may be missing from estate
Step up the battle against HIV/AIDS, urges first lady
HK court orders end to protest
Game on for a healthy sports industry
Property oversupply to be digested at most within 2 years
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |