Monday, July 27, 2015

 

DO U C AS I C



  DO U C AS I C

This thing looks solid and so odd

Is it stone or a piece of wood

It appears natural in its form 

Yet perhaps crafted to illude

Looking at it it reflects a spell

Its facial features shine and swell

It is a head somewhat for sure

There are mouths an eye and an ear

One view conjures a smiling face

That splits the eye and the ear

In the wide grinning mouth it says

Cryptically DOUCASIC 

Come see all that which it does bear

They tell something else hidden there

The eye sees the imagined images

The game of illusion as it plays


What do you see?

Friday, July 10, 2015

 

Cormorant fishing



Cormorant fishing is a technique of catching fish without doing the actual work. It is a traditional art of fishing handed down from ancient times. As it is named, this method is carried out with the skill of cormorants. And the fishing is mainly done in lakes and rivers. In the old days cormorant fishing could be lucrative, but it is a dying business which is being maintained by the remaining experts of the traditional cormorant fishermen for the tourism industry.

In China today, there are regular cormorant fishing shows in Guilin and Yangshuo along the Li River. These are the very scenic and picturesque cynosure which attract tourists by the millions each year, and they are referred to as one of the Top 10 Watery Wonders. Cormorant fishing is usually at night, but for tourism purpose day shows are more regular.

The stars of the shows are the Double-crested Cormorants; these are large birds about 50 cm in length and 90 cm in wingspan. They are skillful fish catchers, capable of diving very deep, and coming up with a fish weighing a kilogram gripped by its beak is a sight to awe anyone.

A cormorant fisherman setting out for business is like a man going for a stroll with his two pet birds. The two cormorants rest at the ends of a firm long pole pivoted on his shoulder as he walks to his boat. His boat is actually a raft made of five or six bulky bamboo poles fastened abreast into a flat platform. This raft is about six meters long with both ends arched above the water over which it floats, it is very stable and buoyantly navigable with the pole. His other accessories are a large wicker basket and a short vertical pole attached to the raft for hanging the pressure lamp.​ An additional item is the loop-net fixed to a short handle.​

Being a nocturnal activity, the fisherman usually wears a loose coarse covering over his upper body. The lit lamp attracts the fish and the birds would know their duty, diving in and catching the fish. The fisherman would then lower the pole ​into the water ​for the bird to perch on it​,​ and ​then ​haul it up with its catch. It is a symbiotic relationship of man and bird; and having a pair of capable cormorants is like having a well-established business.


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However, this cordial relationship is not as it casually meets the eye. A keen observer would notice that the birds are not really free in their employment. There is a short length of string tied to one of its legs​, and another one collaring its neck. These are the bonds by which the birds are slaves to the man, the master. When it is a big fish, the bird is carried and positioned over the basket where it would drop the fish. When the fish is small the man would let the bird swallow it, up to the collar but no further; after which the man helps the bird to remove it, by digging it out with his fingers. It is probably this act that seals the symbiotic bond between the man and the bird. The man takes care of the bird and the bird duly does what it does best. The man carries the bird from home to work and back, helps it to clear its throat and feeds it. When at work the bird cannot swallow its catch, when at home it is tethered. What choice does it have ? Birds do have a brain, bird-brain.  

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