Yes! The name Camellia sinensis (sinensis basically means, "native to China". Another plant that I'm soon to do a video about is the C. japonica, obviously its name implies it is from Japan.
Hmmm. Interesting growing and harvesting techniques...May I ask if caffeine can be consumed by directly eating the leaves, and if so how much caffeine is in each leaf of the cameliea? Also, do the roots, twigs, stems and flowers have caffein and are edible as well?
Why can't you just brew the fresh leaves for green tea instead of drying them first?
cchoi108 1 year ago
@cchoi108
Try putting a fresh leaf in hot water like you would make tea and find out.
feralkevin 1 year ago
Cool!
How old is the plant? And how old was it the first time you harvest?
fesojistheshit 2 years ago
That's sick dude. Where can I buy brick tea btw?
MountAnalogue 2 years ago
Is that the one makes Chinese tea?
makehimhealthy 3 years ago
Yes! The name Camellia sinensis (sinensis basically means, "native to China". Another plant that I'm soon to do a video about is the C. japonica, obviously its name implies it is from Japan.
feralkevin 3 years ago
this is great! i am trying to grow some tea plants from seed myself
JasonIqbal 3 years ago
genius. i've thought so much about how oil it takes to ship the US its favorite drug
EyesightAgain 4 years ago
Hmmm. Interesting growing and harvesting techniques...May I ask if caffeine can be consumed by directly eating the leaves, and if so how much caffeine is in each leaf of the cameliea? Also, do the roots, twigs, stems and flowers have caffein and are edible as well?
777Roghen777 4 years ago