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What does the tracker mean?
A tracker refers to a person who pulls a boat with a rope for a living.

The so-called "stalkers" refer to those who make a living by pulling relationships. At that time, hundreds of rivers competed for water, and coal, timber, agricultural and sideline products and daily necessities were transported in and out by ships. Porters played a key role at that time. They bent down and limped forward with a hard rope. There are many trackers who don't wear clothes when pulling fibers. In the warm season of late spring and summer, most of them are naked, even in the face of big girls.

The so-called "stalkers" refer to those who make a living by pulling relationships. At that time, hundreds of rivers competed for water, and coal, timber, agricultural and sideline products and daily necessities were transported in and out by ships. Porters played a key role at that time. They bent down and limped forward with a hard rope. There are many trackers who don't wear clothes when pulling fibers. In the warm season of late spring and summer, most of them are naked, even in the face of big girls.

After 1980s, with the development of social economy, wooden boat transportation basically withdrew from the historical stage. Disappeared with the wooden boat, as well as the Three Gorges tracker. At present, in some places, such as Shennongxi in Badong, Hubei Province, the tracker pulls the fiber only as a tourist exhibition and continues to exist.

Once the most moving scenery of the Three Gorges, the trackers going upstream, and the majestic and desolate horn sound of the Chuanjiang River have now become the "charm" in the depths of the Xiajiang River.