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Get a haircut when dragon raises its head(1/9)

2019-03-08 16:06:10 Ecns.cn Editor :Li Yan
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A child gets a haircut at a barbershop in Baokang County, Central China\'s Hubei Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck.(Photo: China News Service/Yang Tao)

A child gets a haircut at a barbershop in Baokang County, Central China's Hubei Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck.(Photo: China News Service/Yang Tao)

A child gets a haircut at a barbershop in Baokang County, Central China\'s Hubei Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck.(Photo: China News Service/Yang Tao)

A child gets a haircut at a barbershop in Baokang County, Central China's Hubei Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck.(Photo: China News Service/Yang Tao)

A man gets a haircut in Kunming City, Southwest China\'s Yunnan Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Liu Ranyang)

A man gets a haircut in Kunming City, Southwest China's Yunnan Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Liu Ranyang)

A man gets a haircut in Kunming City, Southwest China\'s Yunnan Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Liu Ranyang)

A man gets a haircut in Kunming City, Southwest China's Yunnan Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Liu Ranyang)

A child gets a haircut in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Ji Zhe)

A child gets a haircut in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Ji Zhe)

A boy gets a cute haircut in Changchun City, Jilin Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Zhang Yao)

A boy gets a cute haircut in Changchun City, Jilin Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Zhang Yao)

A boy gets a cute haircut in Changchun City, Jilin Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Zhang Yao)

A boy gets a cute haircut in Changchun City, Jilin Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Zhang Yao)

Customers wait to have a haircut at the only state-owned barbershop in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Wu Juneji)

Customers wait to have a haircut at the only state-owned barbershop in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Wu Juneji)

Wei Xiaoliang, 90, has a haircut at the only state-owned barbershop in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Wu Juneji)

Wei Xiaoliang, 90, has a haircut at the only state-owned barbershop in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, March 8, 2019. March 8 marks traditional Chinese festival Long Tai Tou (dragon head raising), which refers to the start of spring and farming. During the festival, held on the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar, people play dragon lanterns, eat noodles, shave their hair, and pray for luck. (Photo: China News Service/Wu Juneji)

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