tea
All travel guides tagged with "tea".
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teaChina Tea Culture Travel Guide: Best Tea Regions, Ceremonies & Where to Buy
China's tea culture for travellers — the six major tea types, the best tea-producing regions to visit (Longjing, Wuyi, Yunnan, Huangshan), tea ceremony experiences, how to buy quality tea without being scammed, and the cultural context behind Chinese tea traditions.
Updated May 2026
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chinaChina Drinks Guide: Baijiu, Beer, Tea, and What to Order Everywhere
Navigate China's drinking culture — from the fiery baijiu that seals business deals to the regional craft beers, the terroir-driven Chinese wines of Ningxia and Xinjiang, when to accept toasts, how to decline politely, and the complete guide to Chinese tea ordering for travellers who don't read Chinese.
Updated May 2026
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hangzhouHangzhou Travel Guide: West Lake, Longjing Tea & the Water Town of China
A complete guide to Hangzhou — how to explore West Lake by boat and on foot, where to try Longjing dragon well tea at the source, and what makes this city one of China's most beautiful destinations.
Updated May 2026
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wuyishanWuyi Mountains: UNESCO Tea Landscape, Bamboo Rafting & Rock Oolong Guide
A complete guide to Wuyi Mountains in Fujian — bamboo rafting on Nine Bend Stream, hiking the famous rock scenery, and experiencing the source of some of the world's finest oolong teas.
Updated May 2026
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shandongRizhao Shandong Guide 2026: Seaside Escape, Tea Plantations & Gold Sand Beach
Rizhao in southeastern Shandong is one of China's most pleasant small coastal cities — famous for its gold-sand beaches, surprisingly good green tea plantations, and a relaxed atmosphere that sets it apart from the more commercialized Qingdao. This guide covers the beaches, the tea culture, fresh seafood, and why Rizhao is Shandong's most underrated seaside destination.
Updated May 2026
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yunnanLincang Yunnan Guide 2026: Wild Ancient Tea Trees & the Forgotten Border Region
Lincang in southwestern Yunnan is home to the world's oldest cultivated tea trees, a remarkable ethnic diversity of Wa, De'ang, Lahu, and Dai peoples, and a border region with Myanmar that most travelers never reach. This guide covers the ancient tea forests of Zhenyuan and Mengku, the Wa tribal areas, practical transport, and why Lincang deserves more attention than it gets.
Updated May 2026
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