Indeed. I think you live in Canada/QC. The country that has the greatest water reserve. In my opinion, it doesn't make any sense to import water from Fiji, like we couldn't find any good water on our part of the globe...
I used to. I'm now in Calgary. My tea actually came from the Camellia Sinensis which is usually top notch with its brewing suggestions. I really don't understand why it is so different from the tea house.
And to entropyembrace (thank you for the link btw!

), I know you probably didn't mean anything by it, but the Camellia Sinensis is a very knowledgeable place. Some of the 4 partners even provide professional counseling for tea businesses and they offer amazing workshops (including tea+cheese, tea+ scotch and tea+chocolate! (I'm going nuts! I'd love to try the cheese pairing workshop!). The tea store might not be on par with the tea house though, I've also noticed newbies there so they are probably not at ease to stray from limiting instructions. But I understand that is no excuse. I'm a good customer of theirs and have known them for too long to accept this. I have contacted them on the subject and they noticed the discrepancy. I am to call again when the store is open to find out more about it. They often travel around the globe to get their hands on hard to reach teas from small farms. They are not your average tea place.
When it comes to this peculiar Gyokuro, no one has been able to give me directives that matched the final product (after brewing) that I get at the tea house. I'm utterly perplexed. If you get a chance to go to Québec, Montréal. Go to the Camellia Sinensis's tea house and order the Gyokuro Tamahomare (given they have it in stock). IT IS NOT like other gyokuro I've tried (because I've tried different ones at the same tea house and they seem closer in taste to a sencha (not THAT close, to one, but once you compare with Tamahomare, it's hard to top that sweetness, roundness, silkiness and lack of tanin whatsoever).
As for Teavana, of course I didn't seriously consider this place for buying a tetsubin! They sell Metropolitan teas for crying out loud! I just like to go there for the free samples and ask them intricate questions about the provenance of their tea. It's like an Apple store; overpriced average stocks. Teavana is only good for expensive gifts to impress people or for flavoured teas if you like unorthodox flavours like strawberry champagne.
I'm new to Calgary, so I don't know many places that sell tea, although they are starting to pop out. Hopefully quality will follow. There was a place, but it closed down, so it scares me a bit concerning the future of tea in Calgary considering others have fallen too before I moved in. /freeTeavanaBashing
Anyway, I guess I tend to agree mostly with you Bef, while I understand that water plays an important role in tea (and I DO know) brewing, I am not ready to buy bottled water all the time. I think my filtered water is pretty good and even if I were to access a fresh spring water, it might taste different in different parts of world, so I guess one might never agree on which one tastes the best with tea. I might try and compare a few teas though with bottled water and with my filtered water and see for myself.
So the conversation seems to run mostly around the water. I have the teawares, timers, the tea... I'm tending to think it is more of a ratio leaf-to-water and steeping time that is the problem.
I've been wondering though, does it make sense to use a 250ml kyusu and only pour 100ml in it? I'm going to call the teahouse now to check with them, but I am most certain they use a kyusu slightly bigger than my 80 ml one. I refuse to rest until I get this right! If I ever, I will definitely share it with you guys. You gotta try that gyokuro!
