-This is a floating island on the Minjiang River, and there are many duck huts on it. Qi Fei, a water duck in the sunset, has a long autumn sky. Fuzhou people like to eat duck eggs (duck eggs), saying that they are "crushed" Taiping eggs. Water duck is bony, but it is the best tonic for nourishing yin.
2. Chicken Horn Lane
-The rooster is called "Chicken Horn" in dialect, and there is a chicken dealer living in that alley. The most lively thing is that in the morning, the rooster in the cage (called "super chicken horn" in Fuzhou dialect) crows, one after another. Boys in Fuzhou will eat one or two chicken horns when they grow up; Women in Fuzhou also eat chicken horns when they are confinement. In the Republic of China, this alley on Xihong Road became an execution ground, and people around it would hear the shouts of a strong man when he dropped his head.
3. Strike while the iron is hot
-Red fire, clanking hammer, this street is stiff and powerful. It is said that the best iron shop is nails, and it is also a ship nail for shipbuilding, three or four inches of big nails. We may have overlooked the value of this place name, and the ship administration culture in Fuzhou should start from here.
4. Barrel Street
—— There are a lot of hookup artisans on that street, who make buckets, parallel buckets (feet, dialect ka), bowl buckets, rice buckets, splashing buckets (buckets for drilling well water), toilets and dung buckets. Larger than a barrel is Wong, which is used to store millet in rural areas. Perhaps, those men who walk the streets and drag their voices and call "hoop buckets" are also from the bucket street in Houzhou. There is also a Cooper who also rolls a dustpan, which is a spoon used by Fuzhou people to scoop soup from the tripod. Every family has it.
5. Bowl Lane
—— This alley is located at Tanwei of Taijiang, and there are many porcelain kilns in Minqing in the upper reaches. The civilian porcelain utensils removed from wooden boats are stacked in the warehouse. The small one is a bowl, and the big one is a jar woman. Workers use fine porcelain bowls embroidered with gold, while laborers hold coarse porcelain bowls with blue flowers. The earth walls of Fuzhou dwellings are often rammed with broken bowls mixed in the soil. On the old wall in many-hued, the bowls were broken into ornaments, which seemed to be patterns and "spots for the elderly".
6. Ash burner
-I saw a pile of tall oyster shells when I was young, but I don't know if they were used for burning ash. This white ash is called "shell ash" and is used to paint walls; The furnace that burns ash is called "ash furnace". When the bucket leaks, Fuzhou people will repair it with a filler called putty. This putty is made of tung oil, and there is shell ash in it. Ash burner was originally a bus stop name, but it was replaced by Miro Street, and "earth" was no match for "foreign".
7. Dumping dung on the floor
-"Dumping dung" is garbage. In the past, garbage was mostly organic and could be used as farm manure. Someone built a grass house on the river bank, piled up garbage and did garbage business. Dung, there are also farmers who want to go to the fertile fields. These people rocked the boat and loaded these "dung dumps" back, and here they left the name of "dung dumps" in Cangxia Street.
8. Suomian Cheng
—— In Fuzhou dialect, "rope" means "rope", and "Suomian" means line surface. The surface of the cable is as thin as a thread, and it is pulled out on the shelf. This shelf is not placed indoors, but in the open space outside. Open space is "cheng", pronounced diang. Suomiancheng, near Jixiang Mountain. In the early days, the "Busicheng" of the Drum Tower was the processing place of the cable noodles; Now "Houyu Cable Noodles" has become a famous brand. Soaking duck eggs with noodles is the Taiping plane in Fuzhou. The rope surface is long, so it has a long meaning.
9. Paiwei
-In the old days, in addition to all kinds of boats, there were also rafts (wooden rafts) and bamboo rafts on the Minjiang River. Look at the rapids, platoon leader's bearing, always gives people a sense of charge. That kind of admiration still exists today. Long rows, stopping along the river, from beginning to end, looking over, there are rows of heads and tails. Paiwei is on the riverside road between the second bridge and the third bridge today.
1. stable
-Cangshan has a racecourse, which is where foreigners play. The horses on the racecourse are usually kept in one place, and there is naturally a stable in that place, so the place name is also left.