Ah yes, but I DO know where the cat paw has been. Litter box!skywarrior wrote:I'd rather have a cat pick my tea. You don't know where that monkey hand has been!
Jan 13th, '08, 02:52
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Tea Nerd - www.teanerd.com
Jan 14th, '08, 00:03
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I believe the monkeys in question are great apes, great hairless apes....
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Sep 5th, '08, 14:08
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too funny
Hilarious post by phyllsheng on monkey-picked teas, with guffaw-worthy images...
http://phyllsheng.blogspot.com/2008/09/ ... k-tea.html
http://phyllsheng.blogspot.com/2008/09/ ... k-tea.html
Sep 5th, '08, 15:50
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Sep 5th, '08, 17:25
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I treat them like members of the family.* There's talk of paternity testing, but so far I have avoided that. Course, you know they won't let me have puppies any more.hop_goblin wrote: I heard thru the grapevine that Sal is so serious about his oolong that he even has a couple of trained chimps on stand-by at home for the picking season!
*That way I don't have to pay them.
Sep 6th, '08, 14:49
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Sep 6th, '08, 17:17
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They do resemble you Sal!Salsero wrote:I treat them like members of the family.* There's talk of paternity testing, but so far I have avoided that. Course, you know they won't let me have puppies any more.hop_goblin wrote: I heard thru the grapevine that Sal is so serious about his oolong that he even has a couple of trained chimps on stand-by at home for the picking season!
*That way I don't have to pay them.

Don't always believe what you think!
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Sep 7th, '08, 03:04
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Part of me actually thinks of this as a good thing. I remember seeing this same tea (same packaging and all) posted somewhere else, and one of the comments was "PG Tips will never taste the same again." If someone buys it for the novelty and gets turned onto good tea as a result...
And if anyone else actually believes that it's picked by monkeys, then they should just start sending me their money instead
And if anyone else actually believes that it's picked by monkeys, then they should just start sending me their money instead

Sep 10th, '08, 14:13
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Sep 10th, '08, 19:45
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Sep 26th, '08, 16:34
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Heehee, that's a myth.
There are stories of ancient tea farmers training monkey to pick the tea leaves. But they are just stories.
"monkey pick" is a fun way to describe the high elevation where the tea trees grow - that is to say, the tea trees grow in mountain peaks where only monkeys can reach and humans can hardly. Authentic "monkey picked" oolong is a wild variety of oolong and therefore always grows at high elevation. When people pluck tea leaves, they have to do rock climbing and have themselves protected with ropes. When they swing with ropes attached among cliffs and rocks, they look and act like monkeys - that's why this tea is "monkey picked".
After all, which geek will really believe moneys pluck tea leaves :-p
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There are stories of ancient tea farmers training monkey to pick the tea leaves. But they are just stories.
"monkey pick" is a fun way to describe the high elevation where the tea trees grow - that is to say, the tea trees grow in mountain peaks where only monkeys can reach and humans can hardly. Authentic "monkey picked" oolong is a wild variety of oolong and therefore always grows at high elevation. When people pluck tea leaves, they have to do rock climbing and have themselves protected with ropes. When they swing with ropes attached among cliffs and rocks, they look and act like monkeys - that's why this tea is "monkey picked".
After all, which geek will really believe moneys pluck tea leaves :-p
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