Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Shitun fortune-telling

Shitun fortune-telling

Buyi taboo

What are the customs of Buyi people? Buyi people take rice and corn as the staple food, supplemented by wheat, sorghum, potatoes and beans. There are wooden pots, cauldrons for cooking, braised rice in oil, two-in-one rice (rice mixed with crushed corn, also called corn rice), corn rice cakes, rice noodles, two rice cakes, pea powder, rice tofu and other varieties. Among them, glutinous rice dumplings, flower rice dumplings and sesame oil dumplings are the most famous, which are mostly used for ancestor worship or banquets. Their meat mainly comes from livestock and poultry, and they also like to prey on squirrels, bamboo rats and bamboo worms. Cooking methods are mostly burning, boiling, frying, frying, salting and freezing, and generally do not eat raw food. Wine plays an important role in the daily life of Buyi people. After the autumn harvest every year, every household will brew a lot of rice wine and store it for drinking all year round. Buyi people like to entertain guests with wine. No matter how much you drink, as long as you arrive, you always put wine first and call it welcome wine. When drinking, use bowls instead of cups, guess fists and sing. Buyi people have many traditional snacks, good at making rice noodles, two pieces of rice cakes, pea powder, rice tofu and so on. Buyi people are generous and hospitable, which is characterized by grand festivals such as February 2nd, March 3rd, April 8th, Dragon Boat Festival, June 6th, July 30th and Mid-Autumn Festival. On April 8, many Buyi people dyed glutinous rice into colorful flowers with various plant branches and leaves such as Liquidambar formosana leaves, yellow rice flowers and dyed flowers.

What etiquette taboo friends do Buyi people have? You must have never been to Guizhou, have you? The Buyi people there are so friendly! They entertain their guests with cigarettes and tea, whether they know them or not, and kill chickens and ducks to entertain them. When eating, the elders and guests sit on it, and the younger generation sits below; Serving and serving meals to elders and guests are given with both hands, and guests should also take them with both hands, otherwise it will be impolite. When you meet an elder or guest head-on, you will take the initiative to say hello and let him go first. In terms of taboos, they forbid foreign couples to stay at home together; The host must not pass in front of the guests, but go around from behind; In some places, it is forbidden to move or step on the tripod on the "fire pond".

What are the Buyi people's Spring Festival customs and taboos, as one of the 56 ethnic groups? They have rich national festivals and cultural traditions, and most of them live in Guizhou, Guangxi, Yunnan and other provinces, cities and autonomous regions. As a member of Buyi people in Guizhou, I have a deep understanding of many cultures and living habits of Buyi people. Buyi people living in Guizhou have many traditional festivals, such as "March 3rd", "April 8th" and "June 6th", among which Spring Festival is the most important festival for Buyi people.

Buyi people's Spring Festival custom.

What is said here is how traditional rural Buyi families celebrate the New Year. The average family will start preparing for the Spring Festival early, probably starting from the twelfth lunar month (the twelfth lunar month). First of all, from the preparation of some food to some taboos of behavior activities, they are all in the ranks of preparation, and these taboos are very particular. As an ordinary Buyi woman, it is necessary to learn to brew rice wine. In dialect, rice wine is called "biang 35dang wine". The raw materials for brewing wine are crops produced by Buyi people themselves. Ordinary rice wine, such as rice, corn and sorghum (mainly rice), looks no different from ordinary white wine, but it tastes good, and the mellow taste makes you covet. In addition, in the brewing process, if neighbors visit, they must share the newly brewed rice wine with their neighbors. In order to get lucky, drinkers usually say something like "the wine baked in your house today can't fit in the jar". At the same time, how much wine is brewed can also predict whether the family's family fortune will be smooth in the coming year. If more wine is brewed than expected, the family will be smooth sailing, prosperous and safe in the coming year. Brewing takes a long time and cycle, and it is usually prepared at the earliest. Then make tofu (before the emergence of mechanical equipment, Buyi people used to grind it with traditional stone mill and push it by hand in the middle), so they used to push tofu or grinding bean curd. Fresh sour soup tofu is a beautiful dish on New Year's Eve. However, most of the tofu made is salted tofu pickled with salt. Smoked with bacon, it becomes "dried tofu" and can be preserved for half a year. Dried tofu is also very simple to eat, as long as it is cooked with water and sliced to prevent it from being fragrant and delicious. In the middle of the twelfth month, all kinds of snacks are ready. Generally, there are bait cakes (rice cakes), tortillas (raw materials are waxy corn), Ciba (made of glutinous rice) and rice noodles. Except for bait cakes and rice noodles, which are sent to a nearby processing room for making, Ciba and Shibuya cakes are made by traditional hand at home. Hard-working Buyi people will always carefully prepare for the arrival of the Spring Festival for a long time, not for anything else, but to repay their hard work for one year. We have already mentioned winemaking. How can there be wine without meat? As Buyi people who live on the land, they certainly don't buy meat like city people. They have their own pigs, which are slaughtered before the arrival of the New Year as a way to celebrate the New Year. Killing pigs next year is something that almost all Buyi families will do. It usually begins on the twentieth day of the twelfth lunar month.

Buyi taboo.

You can only kill Nian pigs on odd days (except for the 23rd of the twelfth lunar month, because the kitchen god Bodhisattva will return to the sky for the New Year, and killing animals is considered a crime and taboo). If you kill pigs, please ask your neighbors for help, and you will also invite friends and relatives to enjoy delicious pig-killing wine and share the joy of this year's harvest. Except for some pork eaten during the Chinese New Year, most of the rest will be cured with seasonings and smoked on firewood for more than ten days, which will prolong the storage time. Bacon is not only a good gift for friends, but also an excellent dish for Buyi people to entertain guests when visiting relatives and friends. In addition to preparing all kinds of new year's goods, Buyi people will have many taboos in the twelfth lunar month and the first month. If they don't comply, it will affect or even hurt people, things and things at home. From the twelfth lunar month, the family should keep harmonious and quiet, especially don't make a scene, which will be considered as a way to go to the ancestors' home for the New Year. During this period, children can't cry, and it will be considered unlucky. Buyi people call it "avoid the head in the first month and the tail in the twelfth month." And rely on this to pin the peace and smoothness of the coming year. During the first month, usually from the first day to the fifteenth day of the New Year, machines and equipment can't be started in the processing room, and strong vibration is considered as disrespect for the dead. On New Year's Day, domestic water should be stored and not dumped, and living room and bedroom garbage should not be swept. If you don't do this, it means pouring out all the wealth of this year or ... >>

Do Buyi people have any taboos? There is one in our class, and I want to know about it first. The taboos of Buyi people include: no outsiders are allowed to enter the village when "sweeping the village"; "May 1 ST" and "Jiazi is hungry every day, so don't travel; You can't break ground from the first day to the third day of the first month, you can't use knives or work on the fifteenth day, and you can't let cattle plow the fields on the eighth day of April. You can't farm for a few days after the first thunder every year; Mountain gods in Buyi villages. Are these the ones?

What are the customs of Buyi people? First, clothing.

Buyi people like to use blue, blue and white.

Before liberation, Baotou Pa and Toupa were mostly striped and pure blue. Clothes are double-breasted jackets and long-breasted tops, and pants are pants with long legs. Most older people wear long-sleeved coats and robes. (2) There are great differences in dress between women in mother-tongue areas and women in mother-tongue areas. After liberation, Buyi men mostly wore Hanfu. (3) Women's clothes in local language areas can be divided into casual clothes and formal clothes.

Casual wear: clothes are mainly blue and cyan, with big skirts and short coats. The neckline is nailed with potted flower buttons, and the embroidered indigo waist is worn on the chest, which is a bright belt (except for married people). The length of the plate is covered with a headpiece, and the headscarf has twelve layers, with eight layers of cotton inside and four layers of cotton brocade at the upper and lower ends. Married women don't wear headscarves, but they wear headscarves made of green cloth and bamboo shells.

Dress up: put on a diagonal blouse and green shoulders, embroider the small squares on both sides in a semicircle with colorful flowers on the shoulders, and choose a brocade on the right side of the collar. The sleeves are divided into three sections, with brocade in the middle and batik on the top and bottom, and the lower part of the clothes is an inch wide brocade edge. Wear an embroidered waist and a light belt on the chest. A batik pleated skirt worn to the instep. Dressed up for grand festivals, embroidered brocade patterns are mainly geometric figures. It takes three to five years to make a beautiful dress. Another pleated skirt, called "split collar" in Buyi language, has the same upper pattern as batik skirt, but the skirt body is made of crimson self-dyed fabric, which is simple, elegant and solemn, and is mostly loved by elderly women. It is worn at celebrations and important occasions. (2) Women in mother-tongue areas wear clothes and trousers with large rows of buttons, with blue sticks and lace embroidered at the waist.

Young Buyi women like to wear silver headdresses of insects, fish, flowers and birds and silver or jade bracelets.

Second, food.

Rice is the staple food of Buyi people in the county, and corn is the staple food of villages with many fields and few fields. Like glutinous food, steamed glutinous rice or glutinous rice cakes should be made on holidays. I like drinking, and I often brew my own roasted rice wine and corn wine, which are usually around 30 degrees and have been brewing. In the twelfth lunar month, glutinous rice liqueur and glutinous rice thorn pear wine should be brewed for entertaining guests or eating. When the guests arrive, be sure to drink first and entertain them. Generally, men accompany guests and women accompany guests. The old man sat opposite the guest of honor, and the old man took the lead in drinking and choosing dishes. Besides, Buyi people also eat dog meat and beef.

Third, live.

Most Buyi people in the county live by mountains and rivers, with dozens to hundreds of households living in villages. There are more than a dozen small villages, and none of them are scattered.

Most buildings are adapted to local conditions, with people living on the upper floor and livestock raising on the lower floor, or the first half is the second half of the bungalow, and the bottom is the livestock enclosure. A few people absorbed the architectural form of the Han nationality and built it into a bungalow. Most buildings are "internal wood and external stone", with Chinese fir, catalpa or Toona sinensis as the stigma and tile or slate as the roof. There are stone rafts, stone mills, stone bowls, stone troughs and stone jars, as well as stone wall villages and stone houses on the nearby mountains, forming a typical stone building complex.

There are shrines in the halls of Buyi houses. There are stoves, bedrooms and guest rooms on the left and right sides of the hall. There is a stove in the room to keep warm in winter. There is a land temple in or near each village, which is dedicated to mountain gods and is also a place for gathering and deliberation.

Fourth, family.

Buyi families are patriarchal, and fathers, as parents, have the right to control the family economy and dominate family members. After parents die of old age, they are inherited by the eldest son, which is also commonly known as the traditional concept of "elder brother is the father and sister-in-law is the mother". After the husband dies, the wife can inherit and use the property before his death. When his wife remarries, she loses the right to control her property.

Buyi family structure includes two generations of small families and three or four generations of big families. When children grow up and separate, the elders of the family come forward to preside over the property. Except for the "old-age field" for parents and the "girl field" for unmarried daughters, all other fields and houses are distributed to sons. The field is chosen by the eldest son, and the house is chosen by the younger son. The property of childless families is inherited by their relatives, and married daughters have no right to inherit property. After separation, parents Otawa's youngest son lived together.

Verb (abbreviation for verb) get married

The Buyi marriage in the county is monogamous, and there is no intermarriage between the same surname. Before liberation, wealthy families had the custom of marrying concubines. When getting married, the man first asks the matchmaker to be the matchmaker for the woman's family. After the woman agrees, the man asks someone to bring chicken, wine, sugar and other gifts to her home on her birthday, which is called "opening a marriage" or "engagement". After engagement, when giving the bride price before marriage, the man should bring a string of firecrackers, a pair of wedding candles, two pots of wine and several envelopes of sugar in addition to the bride price of about 100 yuan (even number) ... >>

The name and characteristics of Buyi nationality 20 points Buyi nationality-introduction

Buyi people, with more than 2.545 million people, are a major minority in southwest China. More than 95% live in two autonomous prefectures in Qiannan and Southwest Guizhou, Zhenning, Guanling and Ziyun Autonomous Counties, and three regions (states) in Bijie, Zunyi and Qiandongnan. There are also a few Buyi people living in Yunnan, Sichuan, Guangxi and other provinces (regions), but they have all migrated from Guizhou in history.

The mountainous area where Buyi people live has beautiful scenery, beautiful scenery, rich natural resources and many places of interest. The southern suburb of Guiyang17km "Huaxi" is a pearl of Guizhou Plateau. The environment there is fresh, the water quality is sweet, the air is fresh, and the mountains and flowers along the way are gorgeous and picturesque. This is a famous tourist area. The Buyi Huchao Village is located in the upper reaches of Huaxi, with a gold and silver pool next to it. The pool is deep, and the spring is half light green and half golden. It is said that the fairy's golden bell fell into a deep pool.

The culture and art of Buyi nationality are colorful. Traditional dances include bronze drum dance, weaving dance, lion dance and sugar bag dance. Traditional musical instruments include suona, Qin Yue, flute, konoha and flute. Di Opera and Lantern Opera are the favorite operas of Buyi people. Buyi people are mainly engaged in agriculture, mainly planting rice. Cloth woven by farmers themselves has long enjoyed a good reputation. In recent years, enterprises specializing in the production of Buyi brocade, batik cloth and national craft clothing have been established one after another, and their products are exported to Southeast Asia, Japan, Europe and America.

Buyi nationality-history

Buyi and Zhuang are of the same origin and were a branch of Baiyue in ancient times. Nowadays, the Buyi people still retain some customs and habits of the Guyue people, such as living in a dry bar room and knocking on bronze drums. Some people think that Yelang Kingdom in the Western Han Dynasty is related to Buyi people today. Some Buyi people call themselves Buyi and Buyi Covenant, while others call themselves Buyi and Booman. After the founding of New China, Buyi nationality was named as the national name according to the common proposition of the nationalities. There are many valleys and flat dams in the Buyi area, and the world-famous and spectacular Huangguoshu Waterfall is in the Buyi area. The cultural relics unearthed in Buyi area show that Buyi is an ancient agricultural nation that grows rice. Buyi people are ingenious, and their batik fabrics have a long history and exquisite patterns, which are well-known handicrafts and collectibles at home and abroad.

Buyi nationality-etiquette

Buyi people are hospitable, generous and sincere. Anyone who comes to the cottage, relatives and friends of old friends and strangers, will treat each other with wine. Buyi people are very polite and don't welcome abusive and rude guests.

Buyi nationality-Jieqing

In addition to the Spring Festival, Dragon Boat Festival and Mid-Autumn Festival, the traditional festivals of Buyi people include February 2nd, March 3rd, April 8th and Ox King Festival, and the biggest festival is June 6th of the lunar calendar.

Flower Jumping Party: Bouyei Flower Jumping Party is held every year from the first day to the 21st day of the first lunar month. On holidays, little girls wear gorgeous lace clothes with beautiful buttons, while boys wear double-breasted shirts, bearded belts, blowing konoha leaves and smiling. Enthusiastic sisters lead horses for the boys, from five villages and eight villages, from invisible mountainsides to places where flowers and dances are held. It is a flat grassland, next to a crystal clear river, and to the north is a paulownia forest full of tender buds. There are people shouting and laughing everywhere, at least thousands of them. Cowhide drums are like thunder, shaking the empty valley, when it is fast, when it is slow, when it is suppressed, when it is young, the sound of Rao cymbals is intoxicating! On the field, a group of young men and women are singing and dancing. The song is beautiful and the steps are light. Young people sit on the riverbank and play "Friends", playing Qin Yue and playing konoha to make love, showing their love to each other with a pair of bright and affectionate eyes like river water, and their reflections are swaying, which has a unique flavor. There is a platform near the edge of Tonglin. There are wonderful Buyi operas, rich and colorful, and the whole lawn is full of cheerful atmosphere. They sang and danced, and unconsciously the sun set on the back of the slope, and the sunset glow fell on the buds of Tonglin. People reluctantly rode horses and left the lawn one by one.

The flower dance is another bridge party between boys and girls. They planted love on the grass dam. On the last day of the festival, 21st (called "combination"), they announced the end of the annual flower dance. The 22nd is "Shepherd's Day", which means engagement. Young people take "sheep" home (take girls home for blind date) to meet the man's family and decide on a lifelong event. On this day, many young people go to Caoba to celebrate their future ... >>

Is there a difference between the * * of Buyi women? Whether there is sexual dysfunction between Han nationality and her is puzzling! China people and blacks can get married. Haven't you heard of it? Why don't you let her open it for you?

Minority customs and habits taboo Yi taboo: fasting the meat of dogs, horses, bears and other animals; Fresh vegetables are forbidden to enter the house within three days of the Chinese New Year, otherwise it is the greatest disrespect for ancestors; Women do not eat the meat of livestock that died during childbirth; It is forbidden to push the mill within seven days of the new year, otherwise it will make the family poor; Don't buckle the spoon on the edge of the bowl after dinner, because it is a way to offer food to the dead. It is forbidden for women to wear men's clothes, let alone men's bodies and heads. Female guests are forbidden to go upstairs. It is forbidden for women to give their jewelry and clothes to others, otherwise it will affect the fertility and the smooth growth of children. Dai taboo: outsiders are not allowed to ride horses, drive cattle, carry loads and enter the stockade unkempt; When entering the Dai bamboo house, you should take off your shoes outside the door and walk gently inside. You can't sit above or across the fireplace, enter the owner's inner room, or sit on the threshold; The tripod on the fireplace can't move, and the fire can't be pushed; Don't whistle and cut your nails at home; Don't use clothes as pillows, and don't sit on pillows; When hanging clothes, the coat should be hung at a high place, and the pants and skirts should be hung at a low place; Take off your shoes when entering the Buddhist temple, and avoid touching the head, Buddha statue, spear, banner and other Buddhist sacred objects of the young monk. Wa taboo: you can't ride into the village, you must dismount at the entrance of the village; Avoid others touching their heads and ears; Avoid giving people peppers and eggs; Avoid entering the wooden drum room at will; Taboo to send decorations to girls; Taboo guests sitting on the drum pier where women sit or counting money at home; If you put a wooden pole in front of the door, it means that there are patients at home and outsiders are forbidden to enter. Women are not allowed to grab men's hair casually, and men are not allowed to touch women's feet; Don't let others touch your head and ears. Miao taboo: you can't eat the head of a chicken as a guest. Guests generally can't put chicken liver, chicken offal and chicken legs. Chicken liver and chicken offal should respect old women, and chicken legs should be left to children. Avoid crossing the child's head, or the child will not grow tall. It is forbidden for women to sit on a bench with their elders. Avoid killing dogs, beating dogs, and not eating dog meat; You can't sit in the Miao ancestral hall, and you can't step on the tripod on the kang with your feet; Do not whistle at home or at night; Can't shoot ash and eat chaff baked by fire; No bound Miao people are allowed to be used when frolicking; Don't enter the house when straw hats, branches or wedding and funeral ceremonies are hung on the door; Lu Yu is newly married, so don't wait in the middle. Kazak taboo: young people are not allowed to drink in front of the elderly, and they are not allowed to touch food with their hands; Don't step on or step on the tablecloth, and don't sit on boxes or other utensils with food. Taboo to count the livestock of the host family face to face; You can't cross the rope that binds livestock, nor can you ride into the sheep; Taboo others praise their children in person, especially don't say "fat", thinking that this will bring misfortune to children; Avoid dismounting at home and ride a fast horse at home; Do not eat pork, dog meat, donkey meat, mule meat, dead livestock and poultry meat and animal blood. Yao family's taboo: avoid using pedal furnace support; Avoid burning paper with words in the stove; Don't wear white shoes and white hat when entering Yao's house, because it symbolizes funeral; Avoid sitting on the threshold; You can't wear sandals upstairs; Can't sit on a housewife's stool; On the raft, avoid "umbrella". When talking about "umbrella", say "rain cover" because "umbrella" is homophonic with "scattering"; When logging, don't say ominous words such as "eat meat" and "die". Most Yao people don't eat cat meat and snake meat. Yao people do not use dog, snake, cat or frog meat when offering sacrifices to gods. Qiang taboo: women hang cangue sheets or rucksacks outside the door during childbirth to avoid outsiders; Hang a red note on the door when there are patients at home to avoid outsiders visiting; Don't cross the fire pit or step on the tripod with your feet, and don't bake shoes and socks on the tripod; Avoid sitting on doorsteps and stairs; Don't put chopsticks horizontally on the bowl after dinner, and don't turn the glass upside down. Taboo of Buyi people: When visiting Buyi people's homes, you are not allowed to touch shrines or offer tables, and the tripod beside the fireplace is not allowed to be trampled. Buyi people are used to drinking for their guests, who drink more or less. It is forbidden for anyone to touch and cut down the mountain god tree and the big arhat tree in Buyi village. Buyi ceremony must be even. Taboos of Gaoshan people: women are forbidden to use knives and axes after pregnancy, and they are forbidden to eat ape meat, bobcat meat, pangolin meat and miscellaneous fruits; A woman's loom can't be touched by a man.

The Buyi custom Buyi system in Guizhou Buyi Autonomous Prefecture is developed from the branch of the ancient Baiyue nationality. According to the records in Guizhou's Annals of Southwest Guizhou and Dushan County, and the ancient songs sung by 70-and 80-year-old people, it is said that Buyi people are "indigenous" in Hongshui River and Nanpanjiang River basins in Guizhou. Buyi people used to call themselves "Zhongjia" or "Zhongmiao", while Qiaotou area in Hekou County of Honghe Prefecture called itself "east temple" or "Duyun people". Maguan County Records of the Republic of China said: "Its species came from Duyun, Guizhou, so it is also called Duyun people."

First, marriage.

Buyi marriage is monogamy based on private family economy. It is forbidden to marry with the same surname, and there are many marriages with Han nationality and Zhuang nationality. Cousin marriage and brother-in-law marriage were popular before 1949.

Young men and women are free to fall in love before marriage. Every festival or street, they gather in groups to exchange songs in an open space. Telling each other about love and asking about family background is called "grasping the watch" (Buyi language is called "Yang Dou Shao Yang"). The "above-the-table" venue must face the sun, with men and women separated by two or three meters. Regardless of age, you must call each other "brother" and "sister", and you are not allowed to swear, let alone touch each other, and you must leave before dusk. Those who take a fancy to each other can only sing alone and give each other tokens, usually silver bracelets, through the intermediary of a third party (sister-in-law or elder sister). However, it is very important for parents' lives to be consistent with the eight characters. There are often infatuated men and women who regret for life because their parents are not allowed to disagree with the eight characters.

After the engagement, the man will give the woman wine, meat, Baba and gift silver. Whether it is money or goods, the bride price should be crowned with six, such as sixty, sixteen, three hundred and sixty, etc. , a symbol of Lu Yi long. After the fortune teller chooses an auspicious day, the matchmaker informs the woman's family that the local people call it "Chuanlang". When getting married, the groom does not greet the bride, but a small piece of men and women of the lover goes to the woman's house to meet the bride. When the bride leaves, she must be carried from home by her younger brother (riding a horse no matter how far or near), and then her younger brother will take care of her companions. On behalf of the groom, the man's matchmaker will send his brother a "red envelope" (containing money from 3.6 yuan or 6 yuan) to express his gratitude. The bride rode on a horse, wearing a floral scarf and an umbrella to hide her shyness. The bride arrived at the man's house and was sent to the new house after the ceremony. The ceremony is the same as that of the Han nationality, but the girl needs to cut the glutinous rice Baba brought from her family into small pieces and distribute it to relatives and friends who come to the wedding reception. On the wedding night, husband and wife are not allowed to share the same room. The bride is accompanied by an escort, while the groom drinks with relatives and friends all night. The next day, the groom accompanied the bride to her father-in-law's house to recognize relatives. This is called "returning home". On the same day, the groom went home alone, and the girl stayed at home, but on holidays or busy farming, her husband took her back to live for a few days. I used to "sit at home" for seven or eight years, but now I follow it, but the time is greatly shortened. It usually takes three to five months or even months to live with in-laws.

Second, family.

Patriarchal clan in feudal patriarchal clan system is the basic unit of Buyi social economy. In the family, the father is the decision-maker who controls production and distribution, and the mother is the master of housework. Children must absolutely obey their father's will, and women's status is lower than that of men. So far, they have not been able to participate in village sacrifices, and they did not even have the right to study before liberation. My uncle enjoys special privileges in my nephew's house. If he wants to marry his daughter, build a house, sue separately, settle down and move, he must get my uncle's consent and give 1 copy of "uncle's money". There is a female funeral at home, and my uncle can't be buried until he arrives.

Third, festivals.

In addition to the same festivals celebrated by the Han people, there are some special festivals of the Buyi people:

February second. Dragon Boat Festival, a sacrificial village to protect the gods and ancestors of the common clan, is located in the Woods near the village. It used to be to kill pigs as sacrifices. After liberation, some villages have been simplified to offering sacrifices to chickens and all kinds of cooked vegetables and fruits. Sacrifice is presided over by the elder with the highest male surname in the village. Please recite the scriptures and pray. No one is allowed to laugh, joke, fight or fart, and men and women with pregnant women and parturients at home are not allowed to participate. The festival lasts for three days, and all agricultural activities are stopped in the first two days. Young men and women dressed up in costumes gathered in the fields to sing folk songs. On the third day, a sacrificial ceremony was officially held. Sacrifices are divided into 1 according to village household registration, and the rest are picnicked by participants. The priest announced the village rules and regulations for the New Year.

March third. Every family steamed red eggs and flower boards for their children, dressed them up and let them have fun. For three consecutive days, young men and women traveled to the mountains to sing, and many young people took this opportunity to find the right person. Sweep the inside and outside of the village, exorcise evil spirits and fire demons, send Tai Sui to pray for the safety of people and animals, and every household will add soil to the ancestral graves ... >>