What are the customs of spring ploughing?

There is a popular custom of beating gongs and drums to welcome spring in spring ploughing.

Before spring ploughing, people held sheepskin round fans and tambourines, knocking and singing, praying for disaster relief and a bumper harvest after autumn. During the spring ploughing season of Hani people in Honghe, Yunnan Province, farmers' performance teams went from village to village to perform original songs and dances reflecting the working life of local ethnic minorities, and sang Haruka for spring ploughing.

After beginning of spring, spring ploughing is about to begin. In some areas of China, the custom of plowing has been inherited. However, due to the different environmental and natural conditions in different places, the way and time implied by the traditional custom of spring ploughing production are also different.

Spring ploughing proverb

Autumn ploughing is deep and spring ploughing is shallow. Spring ploughing is like turning cakes, and autumn ploughing is like digging wells. Spring ploughing is one inch deep, and you can top the dung once. Spring ploughing is not willing to be busy, and his face is hungry and yellow after autumn. Plow and rake well in spring, and crops will grow without grass. Crops don't recognize their parents, and intensive cultivation leads to more food.

According to local conditions, reasonable close planting. You want the corn to bear fruit unless the leaves overlap. Reasonable close planting is really good, and the seedlings grow without grass. Good close planting, strong close planting, reasonable close planting and multiple seeds. The grain should be thin, the wheat should be thick, and the cows are lying in the sorghum field.

Sail against the current and farm against drought. The spring drought is not early, and the autumn drought is half. Don't be lazy in spring drought, and be drought-resistant and productive. More hoes in spring, more fights in autumn. Drought is reduced under the hoe, and gold is produced from the hoe. There are three ways to look at irrigation: look at the sky, look at the land and look at the crops. Catch one more moth in spring and one more basket in autumn.