"Guangdong Tongzhi (Haozhi)" written by Yongzheng in the Qing Dynasty records: "On the 19th day of the first month, garlic was hung on the door to ward off evil spirits, and Guangzhou was called wearing the sun. In Huizhou, this custom has been passed down from generation to generation. Although there are no procedures such as "putting pancakes on the house with red lines", hanging garlic on the door, cooking tea and burning incense, offering sacrifices to the gods with "laying a tree hairpin", and then having fun with the family and giving gifts to the neighbors, it is still a typical card-handling procedure for traditional families in urban and rural areas during festivals. There is a folk proverb in Huizhou: "Make up the sky, the land, the right and wrong, and the tongue." There is also a cloud that "the garlic door is hung on the twentieth day of the first month, and the door is bolted early after eating early (resting), and the blind girl who has no happiness to enjoy touches the house (ass). "These folk proverbs sing some specific details of the custom of" mending the sky and dressing "in Goose City, which are interpreted in detail in Lin Huiwen's Traditional Customs of Huizhou Ancient City.