Definition:
Tea cultivation is the agricultural practice of growing Camellia sinensis — the tea plant — and managing the crop from establishment through harvest. Every stage of cultivation — from cultivar selection and planting method to pruning schedule and harvest timing — influences the character, quality, and yield of the final processed tea.
The Tea Plant: Camellia sinensis
Tea is produced from two principal varieties of a single species:
| Variety | Scientific name | Character |
|---|---|---|
| Small-leaf (Chinese) | C. sinensis var. sinensis | Hardy, smaller leaves; suited to cooler climates; used for green, white, oolong |
| Large-leaf (Assam) | C. sinensis var. assamica | Larger, tender leaves; suited to tropical climates; used for black tea, pu-erh |
Many cultivars have been bred from these two genetic bases for specific growing regions and flavour profiles.
Propagation
- Vegetative (clonal) propagation — cuttings from a mother bush are rooted to produce genetically identical plants. This is standard in commercial and specialty tea farming because it preserves cultivar characteristics reliably.
- Seed propagation — seeds produce variable plants; generally used only in wild collections or when preserving genetic diversity is the goal.
Growing Conditions
Climate: Tea prefers:
- Warm temperatures: 18–30°C ideal; frost-sensitive (though some cultivars, especially sinensis, can tolerate brief frost)
- Rainfall: 1,500–3,000mm annually, well-distributed
- Humidity: High relative humidity benefits leaf quality
Soil:
- Well-draining, acidic soils (pH 4.5–5.5)
- Rich in organic matter
- Mountainous or sloping terrain encourages drainage and is associated with higher-quality teas
Altitude:
Higher elevation generally produces slower-growing plants with greater concentration of flavour compounds (especially amino acids and aroma compounds). This underlies the premium placed on high-mountain teas in China, Taiwan, and India.
Pruning
Tea bushes are pruned to:
- Maintain a flat picking table at a convenient working height (~80–100cm)
- Stimulate the production of new vegetative growth (the tender new shoots that constitute the pluckable material)
- Renew ageing or damaged wood
Pruning cycles vary by region: annual or biennial hard pruning is common, with lighter maintenance pruning within seasons.
Harvesting
The plucking standard determines quality:
- Fine plucking (imperial/imperial crown): Terminal bud + 1–2 young leaves — highest quality, lowest yield
- Medium plucking: Bud + 3 leaves — standard for many green and oolong teas
- Coarse plucking: Older leaves included — bancha, houjicha, and many commercial black teas
Harvest seasons vary by region:
- China/Taiwan: Spring first flush (qingming/before rain harvest) is most prized; second flush, summer, and autumn flushes follow
- Japan: Shincha (first harvest, late April–May) is most valued
- Darjeeling/India: First flush (March–April), second flush (May–June), monsoon, and autumn
Shade Growing
Some tea is deliberately shaded before harvest:
- Gyokuro and Matcha: Shaded 20–30 days before harvest in Japan — shade stimulates amino acid production (especially thianine) and reduces catechins, producing sweeter, more umami-rich, less astringent tea
- Kabusecha: Lighter shading (~10 days)