Tea Adventures

Day 3, Fuding

All views and opinions written by these tea adventures blog entries, of course, are solely my own, and not a reflection of Teance or anyone else in the company. Disclaimers are useless in the age of the information overload- anything can be lifted, copied, and twisted for the benefit of whoever. However, in the tradition of freedom of speech, which is a rapidly diminishing treasure for one of…

The Great Firewall

Since my blog was going to be held hostage anyway, my self censorship is now short lived. Autocracy, intent to control information and people’s minds at all costs, complete lack of any long term vision of building a country of fulfilling lives of creativity and value, its people only existing to be ruled as easily as possible…. I suppose that’s pretty much what most countries and their leaders…

‘Vertically challenged’ takes on a whole new meaning

‘Vertically challenged’ takes on a whole new meaning as I fought to remain standing vertically, not having slept properly for about 36 hours at this point, the sweet scent of mountain trees and tea bushes, the sound of melodic warbler birds echoing across the valley, tea pickers chatting happily, lulling me rapidly to sleep. In the meantime, Mr. Dai challenged me to distinguish between leaf buds from the original seeded bushes vs the ‘improved’ Dragonwell #43. It’s easy to differentiate between the round clumps of the thousand year old root stock of the original seed grown bushes, from the hedge like modern varietals. But on a leaf bud level, one has to pay careful attention. Mr. Wei says many tea masters have gotten confused and fired the wrong picking, the harvesters sometimes even make the mistake, and some devious producers make that mistake intentionally to blend the two together. But a discerning palate will be able to tell the much smoother mouthfeel and substantial complexity from the seed grown stock. The ‘improved’ version, very often, is not. I learned that the new # 43 was designed to flush earlier and create crops for the greedier patrons. Mother Nature has a way of applying some humility. This year, the sudden snow killed a lot of the early flush buds, leaving the seed grown plants to peacefully take its time.

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