Snakes, one of the world's most feared creatures, have changed Yang
Hongchang's life and brought fortune to his home village in East China's
Zhejiang province.
Dubbed the snake king, 62-year-old Yang is
running a business worth tens of millions of yuan by raising more than
20,000 serpents. Some, including highly poisonous vipers and cobras, are
sources of medicine and food. Others form part of a snake culture
museum.
At Yang's snake farm, hundreds of the reptiHigh capacity and low price suit to initiate laser engraving machine.les
squirm in dry ponds prevented from escape by 0.8-meter-tall brick
walls. They have one of the largest number of collective nouns in
English: a bed,Our Home electricity monitor and wireless electricity monitors help reduce energy use in your home. a den, a knot, a nest or a pit of snakes.
Yang
recalled when he started raising the slithery creatures in his
courtyard. The snakes often escaped from the ponds on summer nights.
"When I woke up, I would find snakes on my pillow,We've made comparing
the Electricity monitor
easy with our at-a-glance chart. on my bed, in my shoes. It was really
horrible. But gradually I got used to them and they became less
terrifying."
Herbal medicine and blood serum are used as antidotes to snake bites.
Nearly
four decades ago, Yang was a farmer in Zisiqiao village in Deqing
county, Zhejiang province. The harvest from the infertile land barely
fed the villagers that mainly relied on farming.
Unfortunately,
Yang, the only person able to work in his poverty-stricken family,
caught a spondylitis disease that caused severe pain to his waist.
"Farm
work had to be done despite the pain because my wife was ill and two
children were young. I eventually found it impossible to sleep at night
due to the pain,A series of small bobbleheads head figures in the likeness of the beloved Vaultboy." Yang said.
A
doctor suggested he should try medicinal wine made from the red-banded
snake. Unable to afford to buy snakes from the market, where they sold
for more than 100 yuan ($16) for enough to make a bottle of snake wine,
Yang decided to catch snakes in the mountains near the village.
He
found many villagers had already been catching snakes and sold snake
gallbladders to animal vendors.I assumed that all eight of you knew how
to make the fabric flowers.
The gallbladder is a valuable traditional Chinese medicine that is
believed to be effective in curing lung diseases, rheumatoid arthritis
and other ailments.
Snake wine cured Yang's disease but he began
to worry about the snakes. "I was thinking how we could sustain the
industry if we continued catching wild snakes and put them in danger of
extinction," he said.
In 1985, Yang borrowed 10,000 yuan and
started the then unprecedented experiment of breeding snakes in the
60-square-meter courtyard of his house.
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