2 500 km by train, 250 km on foot, 40 km by car and 5 km by boat = our tea China…
But there’s one more digit missing. The one that will probably be of interest to a significant part of you = how much we spent on such fun for almost a mo...
We love tea so much that we want to travel from the Czech Republic to the whole world – to China, Japan, Taiwan, Nepal, India, … just anywhere where good loose tea is grown and processed. We will be compiling our travels in the form of travelogues – along with photos, videos and other materials.
But there’s one more digit missing. The one that will probably be of interest to a significant part of you = how much we spent on such fun for almost a mo...
How is it with tea and pregnancy? Is it a problem? Are you not allowed to drink all loose teas, or just some? What do the Chinese themselves, or even the pregna...
And that’s not all… 🙂
Dragon’s Well and Xi Hu were the last tea stop on our 3 week Chinese tea journey…
The photos of our 2 days at the West Lake (Xi Hu) in Hangzhou say more than the whole post.
It took only 2 hours of high-speed train ride from Wuyi (in some places it was burning around 300 km/h) and we arrived in a thinned-out line-up in Hangzhou = th...
We didn’t give up and each male representative of our expedition (me and Tom) bought a roaster/oven, … for tea.
In CR, we enthusiastically enjoy cups of tea, looking for great leaves, new flavours, … but we never see who’s behind it all. Who actually grows, co...
„Finally“ we enjoyed one of the traditional tourist events – a bamboo raft ride on the river that (not) always calmly flows around the Wuiy pr...
Today we enjoyed another tasting of red and semi-green teas from Wuya – we visited a friendly farm from which Tomas gets some of his red teas…