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1. Xishuangbanna Yiwu tea growing area
The Yiwu tea growing area is located
in the Yiwu Township of Mengla County. The greater Yiwu region
encompasses the four townships of Mansa, Mahei, Yitian and Manluo. In
ancient times, local ethnic Bulang people were the primary growers of
tea. By the end of the Qing dynasty, large numbers of Han merchants
arrived in Yiwu and began growing tea. They founded businesses to engage
in the tea trade, establishing a collection point among the six famous
tea mountains. In practice the Yiwu tea district also includes
Mansa Tea Mountain.
Today the Yiwu tea growing areas are approximately 15,000mu (1mu =
1/6acre) in size and produce approximately 600 tons of tea per year.
They lie between 820 and 2000 meters in elevation and have a very marked
topography. Yearly rainfall is between 1,000 and 1,800mm. There are
between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of sunshine per year and a relative
humidity of 80%. The weather is warm and humid all year around with no
frost.
2. Xishuangbanna Nannuo tea growing area
Nannuo Tea Mountain is located in Bulanghe Township
of Menghai County and is mainly inhabited by ethnic Hani people. It lies
22km from Jinghong and 20km from Menghai. During the 1920’s, the
Republic of China government established Yunnan’s
earliest tea industry testing ground at
Nannuo
Mountain. The Nannuo
Mountain
area contains vast tea growing areas and possesses a long history of
growing tea. Its history of tea cultivation can be traced back to the
Tang dynasty (618-920AD). It is also the oldest test-bed of
industrialization in Xishuangbanna. Today there are still more than
10,000mu of remaining Nannuo
Mountain
old tea gardens. Combined with the past several decades of development
in tea cultivation, this has made Nannuo an important source of raw tea
material for the Menghai area.
Nannuo
Mountain has a mild
climate with a yearly average temperature of 18.7°C. Lying at elevations
between 800 to 1500m, it serves to divide the climates of Menghai and
Jinghong. Temperatures range from 3°C to 33.5°C. It is said to possess:
“winters without brutal cold, and summers without extreme heat. There
are many foggy days, but ample amounts of warm sun. Rainfall is
plentiful.” Average relative humidity is 78%.There are an average 100 to
150 foggy days per year, which makes Nannuo a fine example of the saying
“High, foggy mountains produce famous tea.”
3. Xishuangbanna Youle (Jinuo) tea
growing area
Youle
Tea Mountain,
also known as Jinuo
Mountain, derives its name
from being the primary residence of the Jinuo people. Today it is
classified as a township
of Jinghong city
and includes the three towns of Manci, Shizui, and Sitong. To the
northeast, it borders the tea
mountain
of Gedeng, while to
its southwest is Xiaomengyang. It is the head of the ancient six famous
tea mountains and has a long tea growing history as the center of this
large mountain tea growing area. Today the Youle tea growing area is
around 4,500mu and produces around 200 tons of tea yearly. The tea
growing areas are between 570 and 1,650 meters in elevation. It is part
of the northern tropics, with a yearly rainfall of 1,000 to 1,800mm.
There are between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of sunshine per year and a
relative humidity of 85%. The weather is warm and humid all year around
with no frost.
4.
Xishuangbanna
Yibang
Tea
Mountain
Yibang Tea Mountain lies in Xiangming Township of
Mengla County. In the Dai language, Yibang is known as “Mola.” It is one
of the six famous tea mountains. It encompasses six villages, and the
terrain is dominated by mountains. This area is home to numerous ethnic
minority people. Yibang’s Mansong village tea was once offered as
imperial tribute tea, since Mansong village tea was considered the best
in Yibang. Yibang tea trees are mostly old trees. The mountain contains
a relatively large number of tea varieties. Large leaf, medium leaf and
small leaf varieties are all distributed throughout the area. Among
them, small leaf varieties are of higher quality than the area’s big
leaf varieties. In recent years, small scale new tea plantations have
begun to appear. The elevation of the Yibang area is between 850 and
1900 meters, and it contains extremely visible topography. Yearly
rainfall is between 1,000 and 1,800mm. There are between 1,600 and 2,000
hours of sunshine per year and a relative humidity of 75%. The weather
is warm and humid all year around with no frost.
5.
Xishuangbanna
Manzhuan
Tea
Mountain
Manzhuan Tea
Mountain today lies in the
Xiangming Township of Mengla County. It is one of the six famous tea
mountains and is located beside Yexiang
Mountain, with Mozhe River
running between the two mountains. The primary tea producing areas are
located in Manzhuan (Manzhuang). Today it contains large areas of new
tea plantations. The elevation of this area is between 850 and 1900
meters, and it contains extremely visible topography. Yearly rainfall is
between 1,000 and 1,800mm. There are between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of
sunshine per year and a relative humidity of 75%. The weather is warm
and humid all year around with no frost.
6.
Xishuangbanna
Lao
Mansa
Tea
Mountain
Lao
Mansa Tea
Mountain is located to the east of the
Mengla County Yiwu
Township. It borders Laos and is one
of the six famous tea mountains. The tea growing area includes Mansa,
Manhei, Mannai, and Manla. It is also a part of the Yiwu tea growing
area. Mansa
Tea
Mountain has a
mountainous, monsoonal subtropical climate. It lies between 820 and 2000
meters in elevation and has very marked topography. Yearly rainfall is
between 1,000 and 1,800mm. There are between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of
sunshine per year and a relative humidity of 80%. The weather is warm
and humid all year around with no frost.
7.
Xishuangbanna
Gedeng
Tea
Mountain
Gedeng Tea Mountain today lies in the Xiangming
Township of Mengla County. It is one of the six famous tea mountains.
The tea district is located at the bottom of
Kongming
Mountain. It is linked
with Jinuo
Mountain
and Youle Mountain to form a continuous stretch of
tea mountains. The old tea growing areas are not large, occupying just
over 800mu. In recent years some new tea plantations have been created.
The elevation of this area is between 850 and 1900 meters, and it
contains extremely visible vertical changes. Yearly rainfall is between
1,000 and 1,800mm. There are between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of sunshine
per year and a relative humidity of 75%. The weather is warm and humid
all year around with no frost.
8.
Xishuangbanna
Mangzhi
Tea
Mountain
Mangzhi Tea
Mountain today lies in the
Xiangming Township of Mengla County. It is one of the six famous tea
mountains and is located in the area between Yibang, Manzhuang, and
Gedeng mountains. It is connected with Gedeng and located near Yanglin
village. The area of tea under cultivation is not large. In the past, it
fell out of cultivation and became a dense old growth forest. Beginning
in the 1980’s, Mangzhi was once again developed for cultivation. Today
production is gradually increasing. The elevation of this area is
between 850 and 1950 meters, and it contains extremely visible
topography. Yearly rainfall is between 1,000 and 1,800mm. There are
between 1,600 and 2,000 hours of sunshine per year and a relative
humidity of 80%. The weather is warm and humid all year around with no
frost.
9.
Xishuangbanna
Lao
Banzhang
Tea
Mountain
Banzhang
Tea Mountain
is located in Banzhang Village of Bulangzu Township,
Bulang
Mountain, Menghai County.
It is located 63km from the Menghai county seat.
Bulang
Mountain’s Bulangzu Township
covers an area of 1,016 square kilometers with a population of only
18,000 people. Mountains cover 93% of its land area. The elevation of
this area is between 600 and 2100 meters. Two thousand years ago Pu
people were already living here (the Pu were earliest indigenous people
in Yunnan).
The ancient Pu people were the earliest ancestors of Yunnan tea and the first to cultivate,
produce, and drink tea. Banzhang is just a simple village, but the tea
it produces possesses overpowering
chaqi and intense
huigan. As a result, it has
become famous throughout the world. To tea lovers, Banzhang village has
become one of the holy places of Puerh tea.
10.
Xishuangbanna Lao Mane (Bulang
Tea
Mountain)
Lao
Mane Tea
Mountain is located in Old Mane Village
of Bulangzu Township, Bulang Mountain,
Menghai
County. It is located 70
km from the Menghai county seat. It has a tea growing history of over
900 years. Today Lao Mane village has 128 households and a total of 614
residents. There are 3,205mu of preserved ancient tea gardens and 852mu
of new tea gardens. Lao Mane lies at an elevation of 1,700meters. Tea
mountains stretch in a continuous chain traversed by ravines. The
climate is warm and provides ample sunshine. Rain is plentiful and the
soil is rich. Along with Banzhang, Lao Mane belongs to the
Bulang Mountain tea region.
11.
Xishuangbanna
Hekai
Tea
Mountain
Hekai
Tea Mountain
is located in the southeast of
Menghai
County in Hekai Village of
Menghun Town. The primary ethnic groups are Hani and Lahu. It is located
50km from the Menghai county seat and belongs to the northern section of
the Nannuo mountain chain.
Hekai
Tea Mountain
is divided into Manmai and Mannong old and new villages. It contains
Xishuangbanna’s best preserved and largest ancient tea gardens. The tea
gardens are primarily distributed along mountains and hills between
1,170 and 1,800 meters. Mountains cover 93.5% of its land area. It
possesses a southern subtropical, monsoonal climate and receives
plentiful rainfall. The yearly average temperature of 18.1°C and
relative humidity is 82%. The climate is warm and moist, providing
superior natural conditions for growing tea trees. The areas around the
tea mountain have luxuriant tree growth. A natural environment with
excellent tree cover creates a harmonious tea garden landscape where
“the forest contains tea and the tea contains a forest.” Today there are
nearly 8,000mu of ancient tea gardens in the Hekai tea growing area,
which produce approximately 250 tons of high quality tea per year.
12. Xishuangbanna Bada tea growing area
The Bada tea growing area is located
approximately 60km to the west of Menghai. Originally this was known as
the Bada Bulang and Hani Township, but in 2004 it and the Xiding Hani Township were merged to form the Xiding Hani and Bulang
Township.
Bada Mountain
is at the border of Xishuangbanna and Myanmar. Bada Mountain
is a mountain area in the truest sense, with 100% of its territory
mountainous. Its highest elevation reaches 2,249 meters, and its lowest
is along the banks of the
Nanlan River at 668 meters. The yearly average
temperature is 17°C, and relative humidity is 85%. Beda’s high, empty
mountains and deep rivers cover a vast area. Today it contains the
largest old growth forest in Xishuangbanna. Bada’s
Xiaohei
Mountain is also one of
the primary wild animal habitats in Xishuangbanna. The Bada wild tea
tree in Hesong village has been proclaimed “the king of tea trees.” It
is 34 meters tall and its primary trunk spreads out 3.8 meters and is
approximately 1 meter in diameter. It is the largest currently known
wild tea tree. The Bada ancient tea gardens are concentrated near
Manmai
Village and occupy nearly
2000mu. Every year between April and October, thick fog shrouds all of Bada
Mountain. Tea can be harvested ten months
out of the year. During the 1980’s, Menghai Tea Factory built a nearly
10,000mu tea plantation in Bada.
13. Xishuangbanna Mengsong (Menghai tea
growing area)
The Mengsong (Menghai) tea growing
area is located 25 kilometers from the Menghai county seat. It is
primarily inhabited by people of Dai and Lahu ethnicities. The elevation
of this area is between 870 and 2,219 meters. It has a southern
subtropical, monsoonal climate and a yearly average temperature of 18°C.
It has plentiful rainfall and sunshine and a long frostless season.
Combined with the rich fertile soil, this area has excellent conditions
for growing tea trees. Along with the Nannuo tea growing area, Mengsong
is one of the tea growing areas of Xishuangbanna with the longest
history. Today its old tea gardens cover nearly 4,000mu. They are
primarily distributed in Da’an village, Nanben old village, Nake
village, and Baotang old village. New tea plantations cover over
40,000mu. The area has a yearly tea output of nearly 1,000 tons.
14. Xhishuangbanna Da Mengsong Tea
Mountain
Da Mengsong Tea Mountain is located in
Mengsong
Village 31km from Menglong
Town of Jinghong City. Menglong Mengsong is an important border village
on the border between Jinghong city and Myanmar. It contains Dai, Hani, and
Bulang minority ethnic groups. The Mengsong village area lies at
elevations between 1,500 and 1,800 meters. Mountains are scattered over
its area, and its forest cover is nearly 70%. The yearly average
temperature is 17°C. The soil is fertile, the climate is mild, and there
is moderate rainfall. The ancient tea growing areas of Mengsong village
are nearly 4,000mu in size and produce approximately 120 tons of high
quality tea per year.
15. Puerh Jinggu tea growing area
The Jinggu tea growing area is located
in the central-western part of Puerh prefecture. Its primary inhabitants
are of Dai and Yi ethnicities. It covers a total area of 7,550 km2.
Jinggu has a long history. It was already inhabited by humans 3 to 4000
years ago. It was also a prefecture location during feudal dynastic
times. On June 11, 1985, the Jinggu Dai and Yi Autonomous County was
established. It fell under the jurisdiction of Simao prefecture.
Jinggu’s terrain is largely made up of high mountains. Overall,
the terrain tends downward from the north to south. Its highest altitude
is 2,920 meters, while the lowest is 600 meters. The topography is
markedly steep. It possesses a high-altitude, subtropical, monsoonal
climate. An average of 1,253mm of rain falls annually, and the average
annual temperature is 20.2°C. Average relative humidity is 78%.
16. Puerh Bangwei tea growing area
The Bangwei tea growing district is
locate in Bangwei Village, Fudong
Township, Lancang County,
Puerh prefecture. Lahu people make up the principal ethnic group.
Several hundred mu of old tea forest surround the village. Their output
is not large. A famous thousand-plus year old transitional stage tea
tree sits in the village. The ancient tea tree grows at an altitude of
1,900 meters. Large quantities of stone axes and other tools from the
Neolithic era have been discovered in Bangwei and the villages
surrounding it. Some academics believe that the Pu people were already
growing tea trees before the time of the Bangwei ancient tea tree. Later
because of various natural or human factors, only the most resilient and
oldest tree remains. This leads to the conclusion that the Lincang
Bangwei region has over one thousand years of tea growing history.
17. Puerh Zhenyuan tea growing area
The Zhenyuan tea area is located in
the Puerh
Prefecture (originally
Simao), Zhenyuan Yi, Hani, and Lahu autonomous county. It lies in the
western part of Puerh Prefecture and the middle section of the
southwestern Yunnan Ailao and Wuliang mountain chains. Within the area’s
border is a string of mountains. In fact, mountainous terrain makes up
97.7% of the land. The total area of
Zhenyuan
County is 4,109.38 km2.
The topography is complex, high in the north and lower in the south. The
highest point is 3,137 meters above sea level, while the lowest is 774
meters. The county seat of Enle lies at an elevation of 1,080 meters.
Zhenyuan has a subtropical climate, with a yearly average temperature of
18.5°C, 1,284.8mm of annual rainfall, and an average relative humidity
of 78%. The Babian, Amo, and Mengtong rivers flow through the area. It
was an important stopping point on the
Old Tea Horse Road. In 1990, Zhenyuan Yi,
Hani, and Lahu
Autonomous
County
was formed. In 1998, county-level administrative offices were moved from
the town of Anban
to Enle. The Jiujia township
village
of Qianjia contains
a record in the Guinness Book of
World Records for a 2700+-year-old, world tea tree king. This has
become one of Zhenyuan’s main tourist attractions.
18. Puerh Wuliang tea growing area
The Wuliang mountain system belongs to
the southern subsection of the Hengduan mountain chain, which stretches
across Yunnan.
Along with Ailao
Mountain, it is located at the intersection of the
Qinghai/Tibetan plateau, the Hengduan mountain range, and the
Yunnan
high plateau. The mountains are high and steep. The highest point is
3,306 meters above sea level, while the lowest is also above 1,000
meters. It is located at the convergence of the Central and South Asian
tropical zones. The natural environmental conditions are complex and
diversified. Because the area within Wuliang’s borders contains high
mountains and deep gorges, there are large differences in elevation and
marked climate changes over its vertical range. The flavor of the tea
also has large variation and is difficult to represent with a single
description.
19. Puerh Jingdong tea growing area
The Jingdong tea district is located
in the west of Puerh (originally Simao) Prefecture. Jingdong County lies at the southern tip of the
Hengduan mountain range. The topography is narrow in the north and wide
open in the south, and the land surface is composed of deeply cut
mountains. Tall peaks, steep hills, and deep canyons are its most
prominent features. The highest point (Maotou Mountain) is 3,371 meters above sea
level. The lowest (mouth of the
Wenxiao
River) is 795 meters above
sea level. The landscape is formed by “three bodies of water pressing
against two mountains.” Wuliang Mountain and Ailuo Mountain
occupy a total area of 2,581km2 and 1,740km2, respectively. The primary
rivers flowing through the area are the Lancang, Chuan, Zhegan rivers.
The Chuan and Zhegan belong to the Honghe river system. This area
possesses a subtropical monsoonal climate. Because of the large
variations in altitude, there are very marked topographical changes.
Winters lack harsh cold and summers lack extreme heat. Rainfall is
concentrated with distinct wet and dry seasons. The hot season is also
the rainy season, while the cool season goes hand in hand with the dry
season. The yearly average temperature is 18.3°C and average relative
humidity is 77%.Yearly average rainfall is 1,086.7mm.
20. Puerh Jiangcheng tea growing area
Jiangcheng Hani and Yi Autonomous
County is located in the eastern part of Puerh Prefecture
(originally Simao). It is 130km from the city of Puerh. It lies at the intersection of Puerh,
Honghe, and Xishuangbanna prefectures and borders
Vietnam
and Laos.
It has often been referred to as “one glance at three countries.” This
area is called Jiangcheng because of the surrounding the Lixian, Manlao,
and Mengye rivers (Jiangcheng means “river city” in Chinese). The entire county of Jiangcheng
covers an area of 3,544.38km2. The terrain slopes upward from east to
west. The highest point is 2,207 meters (Kangping
Lion Rock
Mountain), and the lowest point is 317
meters (Tukahe
Village
at the mouth of the Lixian
River). The county seat of
Menglie lies at an elevation of 1,119 meters. This area belongs to a
low-latitude, mountainous, monsoonal, subtropical climate zone. The
yearly average temperature is 18.7°C and average relative humidity is
85%. Yearly rainfall is 2,283mm. In
Yunnan, this is considered a high-temperature,
high-humidity and sunny climate.
The Jiangcheng area has a long history of growing tea. During the
Republic of China period (1912-1949), its reputation had already spread
among Southeast Asian ethnic Chinese circles. Primary tea growing areas
of Jiangcheng County are distributed in the towns of
Kangping and Zhengdong, and the townships of Guoqing and Jiahe. Large
modern tea plantations have been planted in the area along the
Niuluo
River directly adjacent to Laos. They
produce nearly 1000 tons of high quality green tea per year.
21.
Puerh
Jingmai
Tea
Mountain
The Jingmai tea growing area is
located in the Puerh Prefecture Lancang
County township of Huimin.
It borders Menghai
County in Xishuangbanna.
The Jingmai tea growing area covers the
Lancang
County villages of Jingmai
and Mangjing. This stretch of 10,000mu cultivated ancient tea gardens
has upwards of 1000 years of history. Scholars believe the Jingmai Tea
Mountain was first
cultivated over 1200 years ago in 696 A.D. by the ancestors of the
Bulang people. The next several dynasties saw a succession of tea
planting, leading to the current scale of over 10,000mu under
cultivation. Within the ancient tea forest, tea trees are mixed in with
the rest of the forest. This has created a fine natural ecology, which
is a good example of an ecological tea garden.
22.
Puerh
Kunlu
Tea
Mountain
Kunlu
Mountain is located in the Puerh Prefecture
town of Ninger, village of Kuanhong.
It is 31km from the city of
Puerh.
Kunlu Mountain is made up of a series of
emerald peaks with ancient trees stretching toward the sky. Yearly
rainfall is between 1,410 and 2,271mm. It is one of the highest
mountains in Puerh. A large ancient wild tea forest grows here. A
well-preserved old growth tea forest, its total area is 10,122mu. It is
the largest ancient tea forest currently known to exist in Puerh
prefecture. It is also the closest in Yunnan
to Kunming
and has the most convenient transportation, the densest growth of
ancient tea trees, the most varieties, and the best surrounding
vegetation. Kunlu
Mountain
wild and transitional style tea trees grow in a forest whose altitude is
over 1,900 meters. The majority of the trees are over 2,000 years old.
There are currently 372 old tea trees under harvest in the vicinity of Kunlu Mountain
Village. During the Qing
dynasty, Kunlu
Mountain
tea was a treasured item sent as tribute to Beijing.
23. Lincang Yongde tea growing area
Yongde
County belongs to the Laobie mountain
area, which lies at the tip of the Hengduan mountain range on the
eastern side of the
Nujiang River. The topography rises from east to
west and slopes northward, resembling piled leaves. The landscape
features rows of alternating mountains and water and interconnected
hills and embankments. The main peaks are Daxue Mountain, Tangli
Mountain, and Sanbao Mountain.
This area has a South Asia tropical
river valley monsoonal climate. It has moderate temperatures with ample
sunshine and rainfall. The climate is spring-like year around. Winters
lack severe cold and summers lack intense heat. There are distinct wet
and dry seasons and a distinctive three-dimensional climate. The sun
shines an average of 2,196.1 hours per year providing 133.58
kilocalories per cm2 of total solar radiation. The highest point is the
main peak of Daxue
Mountain at 3,504 meters
above sea level, while the lowest is the Honghe river valley Hudeng
embankment at 540 meters. An average of approximately 1,500 meters
elevation is representative. Yearly average temperature is 17.4°C.
Extreme highest temperatures can reach 32.1°C. Extreme lows can reach
2.1°C. An average of 1283mm of rain falls annually.
According to reports, currently known wild-type tea trees belong
to the Dali and Changguo tea strains. Over 300,000 tea trees are over
40cm in trunk diameter, and nearly 100,000 are between 80 and 200cm.
Nearly 1,000 tea trees are over 1,000 years old. Large ancient natural
tea gardens cover an area of 100,000mu. They enjoy excellent growing
conditions. Wild tea trees and old growth broad leaf forest intermingle
in a 1,900 to 2,600 meter elevation South Asian tropical mountainous
ecology.
24. Lincang Mengku tea growing area
The Mengku tea growing area is located
in Yunnan’s Lincang Prefecture
Shuangjiang
County
town of Mengku.
Mengku contains the largest distribution of wild tea trees in Lincang.
It is the highest elevation and densest currently known group of Dali
variety tea trees growing on earth. These trees grow on the middle and
upper reaches of the
Shuangjiang County Daxue
Mountain and are scattered
over more than 12,000mu. The elevation is between 2,200 and 2,750
meters. Mengku ancient tea trees are considered wild-type wild tea. In
evolutionary terms, they are more primitive than Puerh tea varieties.
These trees possess all characteristics and components of tea trees (tea
polyphenols, amino acids, caffeine, etc). They can be used to produce
and drink tea. They are genetically primitive and grow in a cold, high
altitude region. This tea variety is highly stress and cold resistant.
It is a valuable resource for researchers of molecular biology and
resistant plant breeds. Today products unique to Mengku are mutations of
varieties introduced from Xishuangbanna over 300 years ago.
25. Lincang Fengqing tea growing area
Fengqing County
lies in the northwestern part of the Lincang area. It covers a total
area of 3,340.2 km2. It is located in the southern section of the west Yunnan longitudinal
valley. Within borders of Fengqing is an unbroken line of mountains and
alternating landscape of mountains and rivers. The Lancang River
and its tributaries the Shundian, Heihui, and Yingchun rivers cut across
the area, creating four large canyons running north to south. The
western part of the county has more relaxed topography, extending
westward like rolling waves. It forms a mountainous and hilly basin with
the town of Yingpan at the center. The rest of the area is
entirely composed of mountains and canyons. The highest point is the
large snow-capped mountain
of Huangzhulin at
an altitude of 3,098 meters. The lowest point is where the Mengtong River
flows out of the area at an altitude of 900 meters. The county seat lies
at an altitude of 1,578.8 meters. Rivers within Fengqing County
belong to the Lancang and Nujiang river systems. The climate is
subtropical, monsoonal and has characteristic hot-wet and cool-dry
seasons. The climate is warm and provides ample sunshine. Winters are
warm, while summers are cool. Rainfall is concentrated with distinct wet
and dry periods. The yearly average temperature is 16.5°C.
There a 56,000mu of ancient tea gardens growing within the
borders of Fengqing. Among these are 3,100mu of cultivation-style
ancient tea groves, which include a 3,200+-year-old tea tree in Xiaowan
town, Jinxiu village known as the “Jinxiu tea ancestor.” Another
21,300mu of cultivated ancient tea gardens, dating to before the
Republic of China, lies within Fengqing County. Wild tea forests make up a
further 31,600mu. All 13 townships within the county contain wild
ancient tea trees as well as cultivation-type ancient tea trees. They
can be found throughout the county growing in patches and forests. This
county contains one of the largest collections of ancient tea trees in China. At the end of 2006, of the
91,723 agricultural households within the county, 88%, or 80,716, were
involved in growing tea. Per capita income from tea was 400RMB (~$50US),
or 27.2% of the total per capital income for residents involved in
agriculture. It is estimated the entire county contains 238,000mu of tea
growing areas and produces 10,554 tons of tea per year. It is one of the
largest tea-producing counties in China. The tea
industry has become the backbone of the Fengqing County
economy. At the end of the Qing dynasty, the Shunning magistrate Qi Lin
advocated growing tea and introduced fine outside varieties. This led to
a popular interest in growing tea. The Shunying development in tea
growing and production was unprecedented and led to the creation of
businesses involved in the tea trade. In recent years Dianhong black tea
produced in Fengqing has become one of the top three back teas in the
world.
26. Baoshan Channing tea growing area
Changning was split off as a county in
1933 from Baoshan (Yongchang) and Shunning (Fengqing). Its name was
taken from the final syllables of the two locations. It belongs to Baoshan Prefecture,
bordering Fengqing County in the east and in the south separated by a
river from Yongde
County. The terrain falls
from northwest to southeast. It forms a landscape of north-south rows of
mountains and valleys. The highest elevation is 2,875.9 meters above sea
level, while the lowest is 608 meters. This area possesses a subtropical
monsoonal climate. It has four climate belts: low-hot, moderate-hot,
mild-cool, and high-cold. Yearly average temperature is 14.9°C. An
average of 1,259mm of rain falls annually, and there are 253 frost-free
days. There are eight major river systems including the
Mangshui
River.
Eight ethnic groups have long resided in the Changning area,
including Han, Yi, Dai, Miao, Bulang, Hui, Bai, and Lisu. Through the
process of discovering tea, growing tea, and drinking tea, generation
after generation of people of various ethnicities have created a unique
ethnic tea culture in Changning. Along with Fengqing, Changning has a
long history of growing tea. Today it has over 2,500mu of ancient tea
trees and nearly 100,000mu of ecological tea plantations.
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