Make me your Homepage
    left corner left corner
    China Daily Website

    Classic clash of the crickets

    Updated: 2013-10-07 07:26
    By Xu Junqian in Shanghai ( China Daily)

    Classic clash of the crickets

    Trainer Gu Haifang carefully feeds a fighting cricket in his cramped Shanghai apartment. One of eight selected to battle in the city's cricket tournament, the gladiator has been fed a special diet to get fully prepared. [Photo by Gao Erqiang/China Daily]

    Classic clash of the crickets

    Gu Haifang, who started the hobby more than 50 years ago, blames urbanization and pollution for difficulties in finding a good specimen today. [Photo by Gao Erqiang/China Daily]

    Battling bugs no small passion for fans, patrons and purveyors

    It's two weeks to go before plucky Purple Golden Wing jumps into the arena for his once-in-a-lifetime fight.

    To prepare, the promising gladiator is shifting from his staple diet of corn, wheat and rice to a more carnivorous fare of shrimp, goat liver and snake meat to "get fully charged" for the fight, said his trainer and patron.

    Purple Golden Wing is a cricket, a species of the purple kind, the most aggressive among the six common types.

    For the past two months he and another 100 or so crickets have been carefully looked after by retired property manager Gu Haifang in a corner of his cramped apartment in Shanghai.

    Purple Golden Wing is one of the few - eight to be exact - of the elite class selected from a hundred candidates found in fields of Henan province by the 63-year-old cricket master as he sought a champion to battle in the city's final fight of the year in October.

    The contest Gu and Purple Golden Wing entered, a cricket fighting competition in Lyuhua town in Chongming county, is one of the largest in town, if not the country.

    Interest in authentic Chinese pastimes, rather than hobbies such as golf or karaoke, is on the rebound. Cricket fighting, a tradition cultivated by emperors in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and revived over the past two decades, is making a comeback.

    "It's a very 'intelligentsia' game, but at the same time masculine enough," said Gu, who first embraced the hobby at the age of seven in the alleys of his hometown under the guidance of his father.

    The self-described "thrifty diehard" spends 10,000 yuan ($1,634) or so every year on his passion. Money aside, it takes him at least five hours a day to feed, bathe and examine his 100-plus warriors, even dropping females one-by-one into their "bedrooms" every night to "cheer them up". He separates them in the morning.

    "My wife complains that I am like having a hundred babies every year at this season," he said.

    But he doesn't find it eccentric because the "craze is very common among (his) many cricket friends".

    At several flower and bird markets in the metropolis - where a variety of plants, birds and even pet insects are sold - small crickets priced from 10 to thousands of yuan each have occupied the most conspicuous place at almost every stall since August.

    Some vendors have even transformed their entire space into cricket stores.

    "Four to five hundred (crickets) can be sold in a day in good times like weekends," said Liu Hang, a stallholder at Wanshang flower and bird market, the largest of its kind in the city. He has been in the cricket trade for nearly a decade.

    "Business has been going up every year and buyers are very generous with these small creatures, although they live only three months," he added.

    Crickets are often disposed of or released into the wild after the fighting season ends in late November.

    According to the Shanghai Evening Post, hundreds of thousands of crickets are sold from a single flower and bird market in Shanghai every year.

    An estimated 100,000 cricket connoisseurs in the city, the largest group in the country, might spend a billion yuan a year on their hobby, buying amenities ranging from nail-size ceramic water feeders to mini bamboo buckets for taking the insects outdoors.

    "It's a game every boy grows up with in Shanghai, like the Barbie dolls for girls. Rich or poor, you can always enjoy it," said He Wen, a 39-year-old Shanghai native who founded the first website in China about cricket fighting, xishuai001.com.

    "You can either catch a cricket from your back yard or squander tens of thousands of yuan on a breed believed to be invincible. But they do not necessarily win," He said.

    The younger generation born in the 1970s and '80s who are fond of the game are more than ready to spend, though less acquainted with the pastime than older practitioners.

    He told China Daily that he spends 50,000 yuan every year on his hobby and has also invested 100,000 yuan in the website since it was founded in 2003 as "a non-profit platform for cricket lovers all over the country to share information and passion".

    Classic clash of the crickets

    Classic clash of the crickets

    The dying art of Dong 

    Search for a cup holder's identity

    Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

    8.03K
     
     
    ...
    ...
    ...
    国精无码欧精品亚洲一区| 亚洲av无码一区二区三区人妖| 国产免费黄色无码视频| 高清无码午夜福利在线观看| 国产精品无码av在线播放| 精品无码一区二区三区在线| 无码一区二区三区| 日韩无码系列综合区| 中出人妻中文字幕无码| 无码人妻一区二区三区在线水卜樱 | 中文精品99久久国产| 免费无码午夜福利片69| 日韩人妻无码一区二区三区99| 最近更新中文字幕第一页| 亚洲中文字幕AV在天堂| 国产高清无码二区| 人妻丰满av无码中文字幕| 亚洲精品中文字幕无码蜜桃| 欧美一级一区二区中文字幕| 欧美激情中文字幕| 精品久久久久中文字幕日本 | AA区一区二区三无码精片| 中文无码制服丝袜人妻av| 超碰97国产欧美中文| 中文字幕热久久久久久久| 亚洲午夜无码片在线观看影院猛 | 亚洲AV无码久久精品成人 | 综合久久久久久中文字幕亚洲国产国产综合一区首 | 最近2019中文字幕免费直播| 欧美人妻aⅴ中文字幕| 最近免费中文字幕MV在线视频3| 18禁黄无码高潮喷水乱伦| 精品无码国产一区二区三区AV| 无码少妇一区二区| 色综合AV综合无码综合网站| 少妇无码AV无码专区线| 日韩精品无码中文字幕一区二区| 亚洲ⅴ国产v天堂a无码二区| 色综合久久中文字幕无码| AV无码久久久久不卡蜜桃| 免费A级毛片无码无遮挡|