Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

For general/other topics related to tea.


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Jan 24th, '15, 14:16
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Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by djtanng » Jan 24th, '15, 14:16

Now first off, let me start off by saying that I am not one of those crazy Bigfoot searchers at all and by any means, but I was reading the very first book on tea called "The Classic of Tea" written by Lu Yu in the 8th century and found something interesting that I just had to share on here. I myself believe it to be way more legend than fact anyways.

There's a chapter in the book called "Notations on Tea" that talks about a man who was led to tea trees by a 10 foot tall hairy man.

This is from the Francis Ross Carpenter translation:
The Supplement to the Collected Records of the Spirits: During the period from 265-290
of the Chin Dynasty a man named Ch'in Ching was wont to go into the mountains for tea. During one visit there, he encountered a man, covered with hair and over ten feet tall. He led Ching down the mountain, pointed to a tea tree ready for harvesting. Then he departed. But in a twinkling he reappeared, pulled an orange from his bosom and left it for Ching. Terrified, Ching seized his tea, threw it over his shoulders and was away.
And here's anther version from the Jiang Yi and Jiang Xin translation:
Extracted from Sequel to Anecdotes about Spirits and Immortals (Xu Sou Shen Ji): "Under the reign of Emperor Wudi of the Jin Dynasty, a Xuancheng native named Qin Jing often went to the mountains in Wuchang to pluck tea. On one of his trips there, he encountered a savage-like hairy man, up to ten feet in height. Having guided Qin Jing to the foot of a mountain with some thriving tea shrubs, the shaggy giant disappeared. But before long, he reemerged and drew out some oranges from his pocket for Qin Jing. Astounded and frightened, Qin Jing hurried back with some of the tea leaves."
Imagine that, lol.. What do you think?

Jan 24th, '15, 16:21
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by BW85 » Jan 24th, '15, 16:21

Interesting to see that Bigfoot/yeti legends go back that far

...and that they like tea! :lol:

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Jan 24th, '15, 23:01
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by BioHorn » Jan 24th, '15, 23:01

djtanng wrote:Now first off, let me start off by saying that I am not one of those crazy Bigfoot searchers at all and by any means, but I was reading the very first book on tea called "The Classic of Tea" written by Lu Yu in the 8th century and found something interesting that I just had to share on here. I myself believe it to be way more legend than fact anyways.

There's a chapter in the book called "Notations on Tea" that talks about a man who was led to tea trees by a 10 foot tall hairy man.

This is from the Francis Ross Carpenter translation:
The Supplement to the Collected Records of the Spirits: During the period from 265-290
of the Chin Dynasty a man named Ch'in Ching was wont to go into the mountains for tea. During one visit there, he encountered a man, covered with hair and over ten feet tall. He led Ching down the mountain, pointed to a tea tree ready for harvesting. Then he departed. But in a twinkling he reappeared, pulled an orange from his bosom and left it for Ching. Terrified, Ching seized his tea, threw it over his shoulders and was away.
And here's anther version from the Jiang Yi and Jiang Xin translation:
Extracted from Sequel to Anecdotes about Spirits and Immortals (Xu Sou Shen Ji): "Under the reign of Emperor Wudi of the Jin Dynasty, a Xuancheng native named Qin Jing often went to the mountains in Wuchang to pluck tea. On one of his trips there, he encountered a savage-like hairy man, up to ten feet in height. Having guided Qin Jing to the foot of a mountain with some thriving tea shrubs, the shaggy giant disappeared. But before long, he reemerged and drew out some oranges from his pocket for Qin Jing. Astounded and frightened, Qin Jing hurried back with some of the tea leaves."
Imagine that, lol.. What do you think?
Original Monkey-Picked?! :mrgreen:

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Jan 25th, '15, 06:43
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by Drax » Jan 25th, '15, 06:43

BioHorn wrote:Original Monkey-Picked?! :mrgreen:
:lol:

That idea seems like it would fit in with White2Tea's marketing pretty well. Either Yeti-Picked or perhaps Yeti Guide.

I hadn't heard that part before about the early origins of tea. Thanks for sharing, djtanng!

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Jan 26th, '15, 11:16
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by MEversbergII » Jan 26th, '15, 11:16

BW85 wrote:Interesting to see that Bigfoot/yeti legends go back that far

...and that they like tea! :lol:
I'm not unconvinced that Yeti/Bigfoot type stuff is long-running memories of human relatives that we've outlived.

M.

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Jan 26th, '15, 11:27
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by kyarazen » Jan 26th, '15, 11:27

nah... probably a hermit/ascetic.

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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by Chip » Jan 26th, '15, 12:05

... explains the excessive amount of yeti fur/hair in some of my oolong.

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Jan 27th, '15, 14:09
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by chingwa » Jan 27th, '15, 14:09

How did I get here?

Jan 31st, '15, 11:00
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Re: Did Bigfoot/Yeti have knowledge of Tea?

by Alucard » Jan 31st, '15, 11:00

Chip wrote:... explains the excessive amount of yeti fur/hair in some of my oolong.
and maybe explains where this gentleman contracted yetiism...or maybe from a toilet seat.
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