The smooth, round bowl-shaped hills in Long Coc commune (Tan Son, Phu Tho) are like natural wonders that bring spectacular beauty to the tea land in the midlands.
Phu Tho is one of the provinces with the largest tea growing area in the country. Tea trees not only bring economic benefits to households, enrich villages and communes, but the tea hills also create a charming beauty for the midland region, of which the typical one is Long Coc tea hill.
Long Coc Commune, Tan Son District has a terrain and climate that is very favorable for tea trees to grow. The estimated tea growing area is about 600 hectares, tea trees have been attached to the people here for generations. The people are guaranteed output by the factory, supported with fertilizers...
The tea hills here are round and uneven like green upside-down bowls. Under the sunlight, the blocks emerge, creating an image similar to the terrain of a golf course.
The average height of the tea hills is only about 100-200 m, tea trees cover the entire hill surface.
If Mu Cang Chai and Hoang Su Phi have terraced fields, Long Coc has tea hills that are no less beautiful in terms of natural beauty.
Although tea is harvested by machine, with much higher productivity than by hand, tea growers still have a hard time, especially during the current hot weather.
Rain and sunshine are common weather phenomena on Long Coc tea hill. In the photo is a sudden rain, this phenomenon can easily create rainbows.
The entire Long Coc commune has an area of 24.78 km2, 600 hectares of tea plantations have created jobs for many households here.
The light and dark patches are created by the afternoon sunlight on the Long Coc tea area.
People make tea mainly based on experience, using their eyes to see, their noses to smell, and their hands to touch. Income from growing tea is also over 100 million/year/household.
The tea hills are shaped like upside-down bowls, close together, stretching seemingly without end. Many people also call this place the "Ha Long Bay of the midlands".
Each wide, gently sloping hill usually has an area of more than one hectare. To form a tea hill with a wide, sturdy canopy requires the technique and vision of the people right from the planting time, especially when pruning and shaping the canopy. Pruning tea is cutting off old, decaying, diseased tea branches to replace them with more vigorous young branches, creating a strong canopy for the tea tree, with many positions for buds to sprout, creating a high, even canopy.
Harvest tea under spectacular natural scenery.
Long Coc tea hill in the sunset.
Dantri.com.vn
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