Before sunrise, fisherman set out with domesticated cormorants, a seabird, on bamboo rafts. These birds prey on fish. But the fishermen tie threads around the necks of the cormorants to prevent them from swallowing the fish they catch.
Once the threads are set, the fishermen begin chanting on their boats to prompt the birds to dive down and retrieve the fish. They control their birds with long poles
Unable to compete with modern fishing, cormorant fishing on the river Li is now largely practiced for tourists.
"Wild China", a documentary series produced by BBC and CCTV, has an exceptional segment on this 1,300-year old fishing technique, which is also practiced in Japan.
Here's a look at how cormorant fishing works:
Local fishermen and their cormorants set off on their boats in China's Yongjia County, Zhejiang Province.
Reuters
The fishermen spend years training the birds to return to the boat with their catch.
AP Photo / Xinhua, Zhou Hua
A fisherman ties a thread made of hemp around the cormorant's neck.
AP Photo/Greg Baker
A cormorant races after a fish underwater.
A cormorant is handled by a local fisherman as it retrieves a fish to the boat.
China Photos/Getty Images)
The fishermen reward the cormorants with smaller fish.
China Photos/Getty Images