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Where time moves at tea pace

On Jingmai Mountain, a long relationship with forests shapes livelihoods while visitors discover a culture rooted in patience, Hou Chenchen and Li Yingqing report in Pu'er, Yunnan.

Updated: 2026-03-07 10:20 ( China Daily )
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Sunrise casts a golden hue on the mist enveloping Jingmai Mountain in Yunnan province.  [Photo provided by Shao Hongyan for China Daily]

On Jingmai Mountain in Southwest China's Yunnan province, tea is far more than a beverage. For 64-year-old Nankang of the Blang ethnic group, tea is medicine. He kneads tea leaves, packs them into bamboo tubes, and buries them. Months later, the leaves ferment into a sour seasoning.

For generations, Blang families have used this mixture to boost immunity and maintain health.

For Xiangong, a 42-year-old woman of the Dai ethnic group, tea is food. Fresh leaves are fried with eggs or meat, adding a distinctive aroma and flavor to everyday dishes.

For residents of different ethnic groups on Jingmai Mountain, tea is also an invitation. Families hosting weddings wrap a pinch of tea and two candles in banana leaves as a "tea invitation".

Located in Pu'er, Jingmai Mountain lies near a town that once thrived on the tea trade and later gave Pu'er tea its name. One of the six major tea categories in China, Pu'er tea traces its roots to this region.

Ancient tea forests stretch across the mountains, dotted with nine villages. For centuries, the Blang, Dai, Hani, and Va ethnic groups have planted, harvested and celebrated tea.

Today, nearly 6,000 residents live here, and almost every household depends on tea for its livelihood.

In 2023, the "Cultural Landscape of Old Tea Forests of the Jingmai Mountain in Pu'er" was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

The designation brought Jingmai Mountain new attention. In early 2026, The New York Times included Yunnan in its annual "52 Places to Go" list. The publication highlighted how the ancient Tea Horse Road, which once carried tea from Yunnan across Asia, is finding renewed life among modern travelers. Yunnan was the only destination in China to appear on the list.

This is the third Spring Festival after the UNESCO designation, coinciding with the Year of the Horse. Villages fill with visitors. People arrive from afar, eager to see one of the world's oldest tea gardens and remnants of the Tea Horse Road.

Visitors crowd Xiangong's courtyard. In 2025, she renovated her ancestral home, expanding guest rooms from 15 to 36, making it the largest homestay on Jingmai Mountain. January and February were fully booked weeks in advance.

As of 2025, Jingmai Mountain had 207 homestays, employing more than 1,100 people. Xiangong also established a tea cooperative in 2010, which grew from 27 to 229 households, with over 600 hectares of standardized tea gardens producing 200 metric tons of raw tea annually.

She says these changes are reshaping the lives of younger residents. New opportunities in homestays, online tea sales, and cultural tours are encouraging many locals to return home.

She adds that the influx of tourists has also made life busier for tea farmers.

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