Castleton Tea Estate
Castleton Tea Estate is a tea garden in the Kurseong CD block in the Kurseong subdivision of the Darjeeling district in the Indian state of West Bengal.[1] HistoryThe garden was planted by Dr. Charles Graham in 1885. The Goodricke Group took over the garden in 1984.[2][3] The tea estate was earlier named Kumseri. There was a building named “Bank Ghar’’, which had the look of a castle and from that building, the place became Castleton. [2] Geography
8km 5miles S I K
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I M N E P
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Balason River
Mahananda River
Teesta River
Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary NP
Margaret’s Hope TE TE
Makaibari TE TE
Jungpana TE TE
Goomtee TE TE
Castleton TE TE
Balasun TE TE
Lopchu TE TE
Glenburn TE TE
Kurseong M
Cart Road CT
Ambootia R
Sevoke R
Sittong R
Simulbari TG R
Giddapahar R
Tindharia R
Sukna R
Rohini TG R
Monteviot TG R
Mangpu R
Longview TG R
Teesta Valley TG R
Peshok TG R
Takdah R
Rangli Rangliot R The gardenThe most renowned of all the gardens of the Goodricke Group is Castleton Tea Estate. The earth, sun, mist and dew bless the mountain slopes to grow the world’s best teas that are in demand around the world.[4] Castleton Tea Estate, with a planted area of 170 hectares (420 acres), is spread over the mountain slopes of Kurseong and Pankhabari, at an altitude of 980 to 2,300 metres (3,220 to 7,550 ft) above mean sea level.[2] The names of garden sections are loaded with nostalgic emotions about the place – Bhalu Khop is a bear cave, Jim Basha means an erstwhile manager’s domain, Dhobitar was a washerman’s clothesline and Baseri means a resting place.[4] Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the subdivision. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map. EconomyQuality is the essence of Castleton Tea Estate. It has been awarded the ISO9000/HACCP/ISO 22000 Quality Systems Certification. The quality levels are so high that it has fetched world record prices.[4][5] The main products of Castleton Tea Estate are black tea, green tea, white tea, Muscatel, and Moonlight,[6] which are picked from delicate Chinese bushes. The Darjeeling tea produced here has a rose like fragrance and the unique Muscatel flavour.[7] The Goodricke GroupThe Goodricke Group owns five tea estates in Darjeeling: Thurbo, Badamtam, Barnesbeg, Castleton and Margaret's Hope.[8] References
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