The Value of Tea Culture from the Perspective of Integration of Tea and Tourism Industry: A case study of Jingmai Mountain, Yunnan

Authors

  • Rui Li

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54097/ijeh.v10i2.11589

Keywords:

Tea industry, Tourism, Prisoner's dilemma, Integration, Sustainable development.

Abstract

Under the influence of large modern machinery industry, pesticides which invented artificially are commonly used in modern tea production in order to increase labor productivity greatly. The most important thing is to increase product output in exchange for profits. While modern industry has brought fast development to the tea industry, it has also brought many new problems, such as the excessive application of artificial products such as fertilizers and pesticides, which have polluted the soil and near-body waters. In fact, it has also affected the natural reproduction of tea plants. Jingmai Mountain, located in Yunnan province, the ancient tea garden is a sacred mountain in the heart of local people. If the local tea farmers used the famous strategy of "prisoner's dilemma" for their personal benefit, the ancient tea forest would have long disappeared in history. Here, one can see that ancient tea trees and towering trees are intertwined. Mountains and villages, ancient tea houses, forests and tea farmers are integrated into a harmonious and unified world. People of all ethnic groups here grow tea trees, and every family goes hand in hand to protect natural environment. The ancient tea growing in the jungle of Jingmai Mountain grows on natural fertility, without any pollution, and has excellent quality, which has become a model of sustainable development for human and the society.

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References

Li Minrong, Yang Jiangfan. Blue Book of Tea Industry Report on China's Tea Industry Development (2011) [M], Social Science Literature Publishing House, 2011.

Yang Jiangfan, Guan Xi. Tea Economic Management [M]. Beijing: China Agricultural Press, 2004.

Zhang Ping, Fu Xianzhi. Study on the Dual Brand Competition Strategy of China's Tea International Trade [J]. Anhui Agricultural Sciences, 2007, 35 (19): 5925-5926.

Liu Xiancheng, Han Shuyuan. How Agricultural Machinery Enterprises Use Exhibitions to Obtain Maximum Benefits [J]. Shandong Agricultural Mechanization, 2007.8.

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Published

3 September 2023

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Li, R. (2023). The Value of Tea Culture from the Perspective of Integration of Tea and Tourism Industry: A case study of Jingmai Mountain, Yunnan. International Journal of Education and Humanities, 10(2), 165-167. https://doi.org/10.54097/ijeh.v10i2.11589