nav-left cat-right
cat-right

Secrets to Growing Organic Tea for Fun & Profit

The Hawaii Tea Society is pleased and excited to present American Master Organic Tea Grower and Advisor to the Chinese Government who will share his secrets at this one time special event in Hilo.

Seats Limited/Reserve Now/First Come First Served
HTS Members Receive a $25 discount

Keep reading for exciting news regarding this event.

 

Secrets to Growing Organic Tea for Fun & Profit


David Lee Hoffman – Workshop Leader

 

David Lee Hoffman has been traveling the remote backcountry of Asia for more than forty years seeking out the world's finest rare, organic, and wild pure leaf teas. He established Silk Road Teas in 1992 in order to share these teas with the Western world where many of them were seen for the first time.

 

He is the first American to work directly with tea farmers in China and to engage in joint ventures with old, established gardens. He travels frequently to China to buy tea for export, but more importantly, to work with the prestigious Tea Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, and the Department of Agriculture to help them implement sustainable and organic tea farming practices.

 

Mr. Hoffman has an extensive background in vermiculture and soil fertility, knowledge he has gained while living on and working his own land the past thirty years in Marin County, California. His concern about the future of our planet and the destruction caused by chemical fertilizers and modern farming practices have been a driving force in his support of sustainable agriculture.

 

He developed a potent organic fertilizer, Vermisol 10-5-5, that the tea farmers in China recognize as the finest fertilizer available.

 

He is the subject of a new feature documentary film by Les Blank and Gina Leibrecht, "All In This Tea" that is screening in film festivals around the world. The film follows Mr. Hoffman to some of the most remote regions of China in search of the finest teas in the world.

 

In 2005, he sold Silk Road Teas and is now working as a tea consultant and lecturer. He is currently finishing a book on his tea adventures with the working title, "Tea: The Journey Behind the Cup". He is also caring for his 200,000 pounds of rare pu-erh teas known as "The Phoenix Collection", possibly the largest collection of such tea in the world with over 300 varieties of pu-erh stored in specially constructed caves for their proper aging.

 

Event Date: February 10, 2008

Time: 2:30PM – 4:30PM (Please note change)

Event Location: UHH Campus Center Building Room 301

Workshop Fee: $50 General/$25 HTS Members

Reservations: Payment through www.PayPal.com (please send to membership@hawaiiteasociety.org) or bring payment to Hilo Coffee Mill.
Call 968-1333 for directions or questions. Reservations MUST be made in advance with payment.

 

Please make your payment now. Seating is very limited and is expected to fill up quickly.

 

Payment Information


CURRENT MEMBER PAYMENT ($25)

NON MEMBER PAYMENT ($50)

MEMBERSHIP DUES + SEMINAR ($25+$25)

This event is sponsored by:

Hawaii Tea Society – a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization composed of tea-enthusiasts and tea-growers in the State of Hawai'i.

County of Hawaii – Office of Reasearch and Development

College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources


Leave a Reply