Plucking

Plucking is the harvesting step of tea production — the selection and removal of specific leaves, buds, and growing tips from Camellia sinensis plants — where the plucking standard (which combination of bud and leaves is selected) fundamentally determines the available quality ceiling of the resulting tea before any processing begins.


In-Depth Explanation

No amount of skilled processing can elevate tea made from poor-quality raw leaf, making plucking the foundational quality decision in tea production. The key variables are:

Plucking standard:

StandardWhat is pickedQuality levelExamples
Bud only (bǎo xīn)Unopened terminal budVery high; tiny yieldBaihao Yinzhen, some premium greens
Bud + 1 leafBud and the first open leafHigh premiumPre-Qingming Longjing, Xinyang Maojian
Bud + 2 leaves (“two-and-a-bud”)Bud and two leavesStandard premiumDarjeeling orthodox, most quality black teas
Bud + 3 leavesBud and three leavesCommercial/mid-qualityMost tea bag grades, everyday blends
Mature leafOlder, lower leavesLow qualityCommodity CTC; some post-fermented teas

The “two leaves and a bud” (liǎng yè yīzhuō, 两叶一芽) standard is the most widely cited baseline for quality tea production — enough material for economical production while still including the youngest, most amino-acid-rich leaf tissue.

Hand vs. machine plucking:

MethodQualitySpeedRegional use
Hand (individual)Highest; selectiveVery slow; expensivePremium Japanese, Chinese, Darjeeling
Hand (group basket)HighModerateMost South Asian estate
Machine (riding)Lower; less selectiveFast; economicalCommodity Assam, New Zealand, Kenya CTC

Hand plucking allows a skilled picker to select by touch and sight — discarding damaged, insect-affected, or oversized leaves, adjusting constantly as the plant surface varies. Machine plucking cuts indiscriminately across the table, capturing a mix of leaf ages and occasionally including stems, soil particles, and other material.

Flush timing: The optimal plucking window for each flush is short — typically 1–2 weeks — because leaves continue expanding after the optimal picking point. Delay means larger, less tender leaf with higher catechin content and lower perceived quality. This creates significant harvest pressure that has been a primary driver of machine adoption in high-labor-cost producing countries.

Japanese plucking specifics: In Japan, plucking is called tsumi (摘み). The spring flush (ichibancha) is plucked in May–June; the second flush (nibancha) in July; the third (sanbancha) in September. High-quality gyokuro and tencha plucking specifies young buds and first leaves only.


History

Hand plucking is among the oldest human agricultural skills — Chinese tea records describe it as requiring skill and judgment for thousands of years. The Cha Jing of Lu Yu (760 CE) specifies preferred leaf standards for Tang-era compressed cake tea. Machine harvesting began in Japan in the 1960s with the development of riding mechanical shears, later adopted across mass-market producing countries. Fully automated GPS-guided harvesting systems were trialed in the 2010s.


Common Misconceptions

“Machine-picked tea is always bad.” For CTC-grade commodity tea consumed in tea bags, machine plucking is appropriate and not a quality deficiency in that context. The issue arises when machine-picked leaf is used for teas that require the quality characteristics only selective hand-picking delivers.


Related Terms


See Also

  • Spring Tea — the seasonal context when plucking standard matters most
  • Withering — the first processing step applied to plucked leaf
  • Sorting and Grading — the later step that compensates (partially) for inconsistent plucking

Research

  • Sivapalan, P. (2004). “Manual vs. mechanised harvesting quality comparison in Ceylon black tea.” Tea Quarterly, 73(2), 12–21. Documented significant differences in theaflavin content and cup quality between hand-plucked and machine-harvested Ceylon tea from the same estates.
  • Chen, L., et al. (2008). “Influence of plucking standard on amino acid and catechin profiles of green tea.” Food Chemistry, 110(3), 654–658. Controlled study showing how progressing from bud-only to three-leaf standard shifts amino acid/catechin ratios in ways predictably affecting flavor.