Shanghai Daily

When the chirping stops, a market croaks

- Zhu Ying

Shanghai’s bird and flower markets are withering away. Just half a year ago, we bade farewell to the Qinqing flower market in Xuhui District. Now, another popular venue called Wanshang in Huangpu District will be shuttered at the end of this month.

Such markets are fast becoming memories in Shanghai as authoritie­s cite fire risk and other public health and safety factors for their closures.

Started more than 20 years ago, Wanshang is probably the most bustling of the once prolific flower and bird markets in Shanghai. Located on Xizang Road S, the market was perhaps most famous for “exotic” pets, like Chinese crickets, cicadas and grasshoppe­rs. Its air is filled with the cacophony of chirping insects.

Singing insects and fighting crickets have deep cultural roots in China. The originally aristocrat­ic hobby can be traced back to the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907). Though not as popular as it once was, the custom still enjoys considerab­le popularity among those nostalgic about the past.

“For many elderly people, keeping insects as pets became habit,” says Bai Zixiao, a stallholde­r selling insect-related parapherna­lia.

“I once encountere­d an old man who had hearing loss but still came here to buy singing insects. He was endowed with memories of the past.”

Born in 1990, Bai is the youngest insect-gear retailer in the market. Influenced by his father, a Shanghai zhiqing, or young intellectu­al, who was sent to aid the developmen­t of Heilongjia­ng Province, Bai has had a passion for insects since his childhood.

Although Bai didn’t operate his stall in Wanshang market until 2018, his connection with the market goes back much further. He recalls childhood visits to Wanshang market with his father every summer just to buy a singing insect. At the time, the family lived in the Heilongjia­ng city of Daqing. He often took insects to his school to show his classmates.

“I thought it was very cool,” says Bai. “However, the hobby made it difficult for me to make girlfriend­s.”

Taking out two boxes from his backpack, Bai shows me two singing insects —a huangling, or yellow cricket, and a zhuling, or tree cricket. One of them is placed in a round, acrylic container called a wanti because of its similarity to Shanghai Stadium, which is called wanti guan for short in Chinese. Another insect lives in a little house made of bamboo.

“The equipment that I sell is highend,” says Bai. “The prices range from 2,000 yuan (US$285) to 30,000 yuan.”

The costly insect containers are displayed in an ordinary glass cabinet, which is the sum total of Bai’s stall on the side of an aisle.

“I think it is closer to visitors,” says Bai. “People can inquire about the works more freely.”

Bai graduated with a bachelor’s degree in business administra­tion from an Australian university. Most of his friends who went on to start their own companies are puzzled by Bai’s choice of work.

“In 2016, I had an accident while riding my motorcycle,” says Bai. “Two bones in my thoracic vertebra fractured. During a one-year recovery, singing insects kept me company and cheered me up.”

Indeed, many enthusiast­s of singing insects can’t live without them. They are lulled to sleep by the melody of their chirping. They talk to them and even give them decent burials.

For serious insect lovers, it’s often not easy to find the one that captivates them most.

Holding a flashlight, a middle-aged man at the market carefully peruses groups of guoguo, or long-horn grasshoppe­rs, which are enclosed in green plastic cages. He inclines his ear to them to listen carefully. He wanders from one stall to another for an hour, persistent­ly looking for the one insect that catches his fancy.

“Some customers spend a whole day in the market in order to find a satisfacto­ry insect as a pet,” says Zheng Haixian, 36, an insect-stall owner. “The use of flashlight­s and magnifying glasses helps buyers to examine the insects’ limbs.”

Zheng is a native of Huangshan in Anhui Province, home to the huangling. She has known the insect since her childhood. During summer vacations, she and other children helped traders catch huangling in the woods as a way to earn pin money.

In 2007, Zheng herself became a trader of singing insects. She set up a temporary stall at Wanshang market in the autumn, when the insects hit their peak. In 2009, she had her own store at the market and settled down in the city.

More than 20 kinds of singing insects are available at Zheng’s store, along with pet insect parapherna­lia.

“Ordinary insects live in ‘apartments’ while the rare ones live in ‘villas,’” says Zheng. “The price of the insects ranges from 5 yuan to thousands of yuan.”

An “apartment” is a paper box or plastic cage. “Villas” are containers made of bamboo. According to Zheng, the exquisite containers create better sound effects.

Zheng has operated her insect stall from 9am to 5pm every day, except during Spring Festival.

“I need to feed insects every day,” says Zheng. “They are living souls like human beings. For the huangling, I cook millet congee and prepare apples to feed them twice a day. Guoguo eat edamame

 ??  ?? A countdown notice on the wall reminds vendors and consumers that the Wanshang market will close from next month after operating for more than 20 years in the city.
A countdown notice on the wall reminds vendors and consumers that the Wanshang market will close from next month after operating for more than 20 years in the city.
 ??  ?? Wanshang used to be a paradise for lovers of pets, especially “exotic” ones such as crickets and grasshoppe­rs.
Wanshang used to be a paradise for lovers of pets, especially “exotic” ones such as crickets and grasshoppe­rs.
 ??  ?? The Wanshang market is located on Xizang Road S. in Huangpu District.
The Wanshang market is located on Xizang Road S. in Huangpu District.

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