Agyang
Village is located in the Hadong region of Gyeongsangnam-do province.
This is a special place where visitors can both appreciate Korean
literature and sample the finest of tea. The Hadong region is
well-known for its organic tea, which is grown in wild tea fields
formed around 1300 years ago.
Agyang
Village’s green fields do not use any artificial fertilizers and the
tea grows naturally at the foot of a mountain. The green tea in the
Hadong region is called the “King’s Tea” because this tea used to be
served to the kings of Korea. Hadong is the first tea plantation area
to be designated as a Slow City.
The Cittaslow Organization also recognized the high
quality of the region’s green tea and designated it an official local
produce in 2009. In Agyang Village, farming is still done in the most
natural way possible, instead of using chemicals or even vinyl
coverings. Agyang farmers insist on growing crops and plants in their
natural seasons, with only the help of the sunlight and the region’s
fresh breezes.
The
Seomjingang river flows near by Agyang village, and the view of the
river with the dark green tea fields and Jirisan mountain in the
background is both tranquil and breath-taking.
Agyang and the surrounding Hadong region has been the
setting for a number of great works of Korean literature, including
Park Kyungni’s novel
<Toji>. The Choe Champan House (a
vice minister of the six ministries of the Joseon Period) is also a
popular destination for visitors to this area. To get a real sense of
Agyang Village’s treasures, visitors are recommended to visit the 150
year old house and the tree, which is at least a thousand years old.
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