Some words at the end of chapter 1 caught my attention, describing ownership of the tea land and how this broadly mirrored itself from Mid Qing to the 1940s in that large scale plantation ownership from land, tea, production packaging and distribution as in the plantations (of India say) just did not exist and could be identified as falling into 1 of 3 categories.
Petty producers [renting land] using only their own labour or that of the extended family. #1
Wealthy Peasants [ with their own land, or renting larger acreage] who could afford to hire skilled artisans for the purposes of picking or Mao Cha production. #2
Merchant Entrepreneurs who could rent large areas of land, afford the investment to plant tea and hire waged workers to pick, produce mao Cha, and reprocess the tea and package it #3
#1 Hopefully the family members were skilled in the tasks they had to perform but this is not always the case - though they may have passed the tea {sold at local auctions} to skilled mao Cha or Reprocessing factories. However village tea was often mixed together by a large purchaser evening out the very good, good and mediocre tea leaf.
#2 If the artisans were skilled the tea could have been superior to that of petty producers - but if not it would probably still be more expensive
#3 All kinds of production sold their tea on to another link in the chain Initial financing of the tea, and eventual marketing and distribution rested with Outsiders whether from Shanghai, Canton or Europe/America.
Reading elsewhere that quality Oolong not only needs good leaf to begin with, but transportation and storage, production of Mao Cha and reprocessing are all opportunities for a Quality to be ruined.
This made me wonder how important is control over the whole supply chain. It made me wonder from time to time, but as this is not information generally available about different Oolongs we are left to find trustworth vendors whose products we have enjoyed in the past and make use of their services again.
Brain Teaser closed, or so I thought until recent teachat about the early(iest) arrival of Spring Tea. Part of the tea reprocessing that takes it from Mao Cha to the finished tea - include baking[/roasting] AND Resting. - before the tea reaches it's finest drinkable state. So if we know when a particular Spring Harvest begins in a given region can we guess that a given tea has appeared TOO early on the market to be of the highest quality?
Beaujolais Nouveau was a big FUN thing in 1960's, in the 1970's it became a huge fad - More Beaujolias Nouveau was drunk in Paris in the early 1980's than the entire production of Beaujolais each year. Serious Beaujolias was never Nouveau it needed more time and care in production - but after the Beaujolais Nouveau explosion was over serious Beaujolais was tarnished by the same stigma and suffered greatly because of it.
So do we worry about it arriving too early - or just trust our favoured vendors again. Personally I like to revisit favoured vendors but have great fun rooting out new sources also, come Spring however I may just keep track of when harvesting occurs before trying any new suppliers
