At 4:00 a.m. at the entrance of the hotel, a Dudu bus (500 rupees for round-trip charter) traveled in the night for about a quarter of an hour and arrived at the fishing market outside Niganbu, near the sea, where people were already rolling in and out. Local fishermen usually go fishing in the evening. They return to the fish market before dawn in the morning and begin to sell their hard work all night. There are many fishing boats docked on the shore. Some are still unloading fish, while others are bargaining. There are all kinds of big and small fish in the open space along the shore. Basically, most of them are sea fish whose names we don't know. The seller and the buyer shouted, said, compared, aggregated, in order to maximize their respective interests and strive to pursue. In the morning, we saw the peripheral fish market. After breakfast, we walked to the Niganbu Central Fish Market, which is located on the coast of the city. First, we saw a dirty beach on the coast with flakes of sacks spread out. Different types of fish were exposed to the sun to make dried fish. Small fishing boats docked along the shore are collecting their nets. Most of the fish in the net are small fish less than one finger long. How terrible the fishing methods are to the fish resources. Unlike what you see in the peripheral fish market in the early morning, there are few big fish for sale in groups. The big fish for sale are obviously wholesaled from the peripheral fish market in the early morning. Seeing such a fish market, apart from the sad fate of the small fish in the Indian Ocean, there is really no interest in touring. Throughout the beach, in addition to drying dried fish, is a group of people sorting fish and shrimp, chaotic and dirty. On the beach of Shanghai, besides the birds of Sri Lanka, there are also graceful figures of egrets. Egrets and crows are looking for small fish and shrimps that people have abandoned. The destruction of marine resources by human beings has made them lazy. Visitors to the fish market can also see some figures, but there are also some Chinese tourists, but to be fair, the early morning peripheral fish market can represent the true face of Niganbu, a coastal fishing town. A short walk away from the fish market and seeing the harbour and river leading to the seashore full of returning fishing boats, the momentum and scene is the true portrayal of the small fishing village of that year and the fishing town of today.