This type and form of tea isn't that novel; it comes up. I tried another version last year and really liked it and was happy to try a second from a Russian vendor, Moychay, that was also nice:
http://teaintheancientworld.blogspot.co ... -hong.html
It touches on the aging issue a little, that sun-dried blacks are said to improve over a few years' time. There was a question on here (Tea Chat) about an ideal storage environment, related to whether those should be stored like sheng or not (humidity level controlled in the same range) and I don't get into that.
I've tried typical loose sun dried Dian Hong across a time frame of a year or so and it did improve a little but I never made an attempt to maintain limited air contact and a 70-80% RH environment as for sheng. Living in Bangkok the climate is already that, so it would relate more to not keeping sheng in a completely sealed package.
To add a little about the tea the flavors were dried fruit, with a little tartness, and plenty of earthier aspects along with a "warmer" mineral base (different rocks than Wuyi Yancha or sheng aspects relate to, I guess).