The province where the tea tree is a treenot a hedge. Six famous mountains rim the Mekong's lower bank; old-growth gardens are walked, not pruned. Sheng pu-erh is pressed in the spring and quietly waits decades. Shou is forced fast in a wet pile, and tastes of wet wood and good earth.
The Qing court named six gardens on the Mekong's eastern bank in the 17th century. Five are walkable in a single eight-day loop from Jinghong; the sixth, Youle, sits across the river and is best reached by ferry on a market day.
Maocha withers in shade, fires once on a flat wok, sun-dries on bamboo, then steams briefly and presses into a 357-gram cake. The compression bruises just enough.
Wò dūi, the wet pile, was invented at Menghai in 1973 to mimic the slow tongue of aged sheng in a single season. Microbes do the listening. The room smells like wet hay.
Cliffs and gorges. Roasted oolongs that smell of warm stone.