Located in the central province of Quang Nam, Binh Minh village is well known for selling dried fish. |
The fish harvesting season begins in April and usually lasts through to August. |
Fish cutters are hired to remove the scales, guts, bones, and heads of fresh fish after they are caught. |
During the peak season, dried fish producers must hire additional workers in order to clean, debone, marinate, and dry the fish in the sun. |
There are dozens of fish steamers working at one time while fish steamed continuously for up to five minutes depending on different species. |
Fish are moved to the steaming area. |
A worker is in charge of steaming the fish. |
Steamers are usually busy for the entire day. |
After being steamed, the fish is then brought outside for drying. |
Dried fish is subsequently sold to traders throughout Khanh Hoa province. |
Dried fish is in high demand, and production workshops operate at full capacity. |
Workers often check dried fish to ensure their quality before sales. |
Each production workshop hires between seven and 10 workers on average. |
During sunny days, it normally only takes one day to dry the fish. |
Fish is collected, packed, and then transported to traders. |
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, local villagers earned a lot of money from exporting dried fish to China. |
A woman says that fish drying has helped her earn an extra income over the past dozen years. |
A large scale production workshop can be seen from high above. |
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