Life on an organic tea farm
Pinglin in New Taipei City is an important production area for Taiwan’s Paochong (Baozhong) tea and lies upstream from Feitsui Reservoir, which supplies drinking water to about six million people in Greater Taipei. For more than a century, growing and making tea has been the local livelihood, deeply tied to these mountain forests and water sources.
Guided by someone from the Tse-Xin Organic Agriculture Foundation (TOAF; hereafter Tse-Xin), we step into an organic tea farm. Besides the lush green tea bushes, wild grasses and weeds grow freely in the fields, and the land between the tea rows is covered with abundant vegetation. Birdsong and the hum of insects drift in. Without the neatly uniform rows and bare ground of conventional tea farms, this one seems a little “messy”—but it is full of life. Compared with the orderly landscapes created by conventional tea cultivation, this vibrant organic tea farm leaves us with a most vivid first impression of what such an operation can be.

In Pinglin, the Tse-Xin Organic Agriculture Foundation promotes the “Jingyuan [Clean Source] Project,” encouraging tea farmers to transition to organic cultivation so that a cup of tea can also carry the idea of environmental sustainability. (left photo courtesy of Tse-Xin Organic Agriculture Foundation)