Tea Adventures

I scored some wild green tea from the other side of the mountain….

I scored some wild green tea from the other side of the mountain. Mr. Dai’s friend managed to make just a bit for us all to try at the harvest party. This mountain turned out to be one of the original indigenous areas of the guanmu bush type Camellia sinensis. Not only are many tea bushes ancient and thousands of years old, there are numerous wild tea bushes all over in the topmost areas of the mountain. Just paying the teapickers to hunt and find and harvest these sparse bushes though makes it difficult, but it’s not yet prohibitive. I plan to procure as much as they can make so such treasures do not go to waste!

Wild mountain herbs such as Xiagu Chao 夏骨草,Guanyin tree(reddish),…

Wild mountain herbs such as Xiagu Chao 夏骨草,Guanyin tree(reddish), and of course, one of the most medicinal of all, wild old tea bushes are plentiful and have been completely abandoned now in the modern era of industrialized China. Agricultural communities like this one, despite its treasure trove of wild and cultivated plants, are left to fend for itself, the plants growing tall and wild without human contact. Forget fertilizers, pesticides, and other concerns over modern tea farming. Mr. Dai’s lucky if he can get enough people to hunt around this big wild mountain and harvest the teas for him. Yellow teabushes, as it turns out, are 70% from ancient trees, and only a few ‘young’ bushes remain.

#medicinal herbs #yellow tea

At 5:30, I was up with Mr. Dai to visit around and see the…

At 5:30, I was up with Mr. Dai to visit around and see the village in action. Fewer than 100 people and around 17 of them are seniors over 70 years old, pretty much most of the rest are kids staying behind to go to school. Almost all of the adults have left to work in cities. Few of them stayed with the tea profession such as Mr. Dai has done. Without a doubt, this is one of the most improvished villages in China. In the middle of absolutely nowhere, Mr. Dai says they are so remote they even survived the Japanese invasion/slaughter, as the village was too hard to get to. In this wild, abandoned mountain, a few abandoned households of folks remain, with their ancient tea bushes, mulberry and ginkgo trees, wild cherry trees, and the most glorious groves of bamboo. Medicinal herbs are plentiful. I helped myself all along the way with wild berries that no one touches.

#anhui # yellow tea

Mr. Dai’s family of 4 brothers, his mom, various kids and wives…

Mr. Dai’s family of 4 brothers, his mom, various kids and wives gather to cook dinner at the family hearth. Green garlic from their hillside, water from the mountain stream, vegetables from their neighbor… It’s a far cry from the scary food stories coming out in the Chinese news everyday. Living in such a remote farm is rough, I haven’t been to a hole in the ground outhouse for a while. But the air is fresh and clean, too chilly and high up for mosquitoes, the food and the tea will be wood fired…..all is good.

#green tea #china village

There are ‘Yellow tea’ out in the market but they are actually…

There are ‘Yellow tea’ out in the market but they are actually Huang Ya (shown in small glass), which means Yellow Bud green tea. The name of the tea is Yellow Bud, but it is green tea processing, not yellow tea processing. According to Mr. Dai, the artisan specializing in yellow processing, these little leaf buds can not withstand the high fire wok required for the yellow processing.
#yellow tea #green tea

Navigate