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!potatoes!
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Joined: Tue Apr 14, 2009 2:13 pm
Location: wnc - zones 6/7 line

tea from seed

I live kind of right on the line where true tea (camellia sinensis) might take damage during the coldest nights of the year. as a result, the one tea plant I have, I've always kept in a pot and it joined the ranks of the mostly-hardy (with my bay tree and loquat), coming inside when the lows drop below 20F. some friends in the area (admittedly, lower in elevation than me) have been having some decent successes with growing tea in-ground, though, so I've decided to go for it in a bigger way. the potted plant I have (sochi variety, so should be relatively cold-tolerant compared to others) will be going in the ground up on the hillside, where it will have some protection from wind from some big rocks, and will also have good frost-drainage.

one friend, who has a number of plants (25+) regularly has good crops of seed from his plants, and I managed to swipe a few good handfuls of them at an event this spring (with permission!). I've had bad luck trying to grow tea from seed in the past - all sent-away-for dry seed. this is fresh seed, so many of the problems of coming from dry are gone. the instructions were: plant them, don't let them dry out too much or freeze.

Image
these are some of the seedlings (I think the total count is at 20 now). I'll try to find relatively safe places to plant them too, once they get big enough, but it'll be nice to have enough plants where losing one won't be the end of that experiment.

been playing around with processing tea for drinking the last few years, and it will be really nice to have more leaves/tips to play with as everything gets bigger. there are a few smaller 'plantations' (like my friend's) in the area. there are also couple of fancy tea-houses in our very local-centric town that have already made clear that if we ever produce enough (and get our processes down), they will be happy to pay top dollar for local mountain-grown tea! (whether I'll ever have enough plants to make such an idea profitable, rather than just 'cool', remains to be seen...)

anyway, that's where this story's at for now. this program has been brought to you by applestar's request and my bit of extra time this morning.

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Lindsaylew82
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Joined: Wed May 21, 2014 9:26 pm
Location: Upstate, SC

anyway, that's where this story's at for now. this program has been brought to you by applestar's request and my bit of extra time this morning.
"Tea" Hee!

I see your baby tea leaves, and all I can think about is that Snapple White Tea Commercial! you should google it. So funny!

We drink so much herbal tea and green tea. We grow most of the herbs, but it would be nice to research tea plants (?) and maybe add some to our future landscaping plans!



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