Dear STEEM Community,
Today i am going to introducing with ASSAM TEA...... 
The story of Assam tea is tied in with being found by a Scottish globe-trotter, Robert Bruce, who saw tea-like plants developing wild close Rangpur. This was in 1823 and Bruce was on an exchanging mission. Bruce was purportedly coordinated by Maniram Dewan to Bessa Gam who was the neighborhood Singpho boss. Bessa Gam demonstrated Bruce how neighborhood tribesmen (known as the Singhpos) fermented tea from leaves of this shrub. Bruce made a course of action with the innate boss to give him tests of these tea leaves with seeds, as he anticipated having them experimentally analyzed. Robert Bruce passed away a couple of years after the fact, never having seen this plant being legitimately grouped.
In early 1830, Robert Bruce's sibling, Charles, sent a couple of these leaves to a greenhouse in Calcutta to be legitimately examination and it was then that this plant was formally named a tea assortment and named Camellia sinensis var. Assamica.
The main organization that was set up for developing and making this tea was the Assam Tea Company, began in the year 1839. It extended relentlessly and by 1862, the business involved more than 160 greenery enclosures, all claimed by 5 open organizations alongside 57 private players.
The British East India Company's mediation was perceived through 'specialists' who constituted the 1834 Tea Committee and they surveyed the business potential and logical nature of the Assam tea. By late 1830s, a business opportunity for the Assam Tea started to be assessed in London and the East India Company's sure input prompted the initiation of a protracted procedure of withdrawal of rural grounds and woods to enable critical offers of this territory to be changed over to tea ranches by the private capital.
Assam is situated in north-east India. It encompasses the northern Himalayas, the Brahmaputra fields, and the Deccan level, making it one of the most extravagant biodiversity zones on the planet. Assam encounters overwhelming precipitation and sticky air conditions consistently. This geography frames one of the most extravagant biodiversity zones on the planet and is home to a portion of the imperiled types of widely varied vegetation, including the one-horned Indian Rhinoceros. The valley is prolific and offers rich loamy soil to the area, making the ideal normal setting for the generation of tea.