From Fang Ting’s Spring Exploration in Wuyishan
In late April 2025, I traveled to the Wuyi Mountains to meet a family whose Shui Xian bushes have grown on rocky Zhengyan slopes for three decades. The air was thick with mist and the scent of fresh leaves withering in bamboo trays. I cupped this lot in the farmhouse just after final roasting — the liquor was luminous and that classic mineral core was already singing. Shui Xian is one of Wuyi’s great pillars: a cultivar that translates the mountain’s iron-rich earth into a tea of grace and endurance. This particular batch comes from a single parcel at about 800 metres, hand-picked and charcoal-fired by the farmer’s son, who learned from his grandfather. I selected it for its clarity — there’s no masking, just layered florals suspended over a cool, stony depth. Returning to Zhengzhou, I shared it with my colleagues and we all felt the same immediate sense of place. It’s a tea that stands as a testament to why I keep returning to Wuyi spring after spring.