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Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Tue Jun 18, 2024 10:12 pm
by Bok
Unverified video from social media, but not looking good:
A friend noticed that it looks to organised to be from the inner area of Wuyi.

Still prices are gonna be higher and/or possibly more teas sold as something they are not.

Re: Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Tue Jun 18, 2024 10:56 pm
by Tyler
Torrential rains prompt evacuations in east China's Fujian

http://en.people.cn/n3/2024/0617/c90000-20181818.html

Re: Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Wed Jun 19, 2024 12:01 am
by Sunyata
The last 2 years (2023, 2024) have been horrendous for Dancong teas as well. Early drought into flooding during harvest season. Very unfortunate situation for oolong tea drinkers.

Re: Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Fri Jun 21, 2024 7:43 am
by LeoFox
Parents' housekeeper has a daughter in law who works for a wuyi tea factory. She is saying flooding mostly affected lower residential areas and tea fields outside of the mountains. Flooding was not so bad in the mountains. Her factory is higher elevation in the mountains so when flooding started she and her family moved from their homes in the lower residential area and are staying in the factory. She said tea will likely be lower quality and more expensive

Re: Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2024 7:41 am
by Bok
Yeah that is what I heard as well, likely a few years of higher prices and lower quality.

Re: Flooding in Wuyi

Posted: Mon Aug 05, 2024 11:57 am
by akedomakona
I was in Wuyi during the flooding; it only effected the town and lowlands surrounding and directly inside the inner park. There were a few landslides within the park, but won't have any effect on the tea higher up the mountain. Prices *may* be higher this year, but it will have little to do with the flooding which hit after harvest; some regions of Wuyi town next to the river were flooded, and that may have ruined some stocks of tea sitting on the ground or low shelves, and a good merchant never lets a good crisis go to waste. Much more important is the persistent effects of climate change: most of southern China has just swung from 2+ years of drought and extreme heat to flooding + extreme heat; yields are low and the rains come late, after the tea should have sprouted. The flooding may effect next years prices as some trees in the lower-regions may not have survived, yielding less tea that can be sold as "inner park", but the lower yields and astronomical prices of high-end famous regions within the inner park will not be effected by the flooding itself.