Located high in the mountains of northwestern Miyazaki Prefecture, the Takachiho area is frequently shrouded in fog, making it perfect for quality tea leaves. Legend connects many deities of the Japanese Shinto pantheon to the area, bestowing upon it the moniker “Village of the Gods.” Patchworked across 520 acres of this luminous land lie the fields of Kai Seichaen. Kai Masaya is a fourth-generation grower, continuing an over 70-year tradition of Kai family tea cultivation. Working alongside his parents and workers he considers to be “like family,”
Masaya produces award-winning Oolong, Koucha, and Kamairicha. With the knowledge that the number of tea farmers in the Takachiho domain is decreasing, the Kai family goal is continuing the tradition of tea growing for the sake of his hometown as well as the enjoyment of new clientele. It’s just as important to him that his tea remains a local favorite as well as a national one–and we hope, an international hit as well.
“When I was a child, I used to think that this was a rural area,” says Kai san. “But now I feel proud of Takachiho, which has a deep history and many gods nearby.” Kai Seichaen is dedicated to preserving local traditions of tea production and local tastes while also catching up to the mechanization of the 21st century. Using mostly organic fertilizer and a small local team, Kai Seichaen is truly as magical as the surroundings suggest.
THE MIYAZAKI REGION