the quarterly log — an exercise in attention, not assertion
Strength training is a practice of measured increments, and this cohort borrows that same patience. Over thirteen weeks, a small group of twenty athletes will work with aged Shú Pǔ’ěr (熟普洱) — deep, earthy, fermented tea from Yunnan — within the architecture of their existing lifting sessions. The cohort is not a trial, not a protocol to be optimised, and certainly not a source of performance claims. It is a collective logbook; an honest, self-directed exploration of how one specific tea moves through the body before, during, and after heavy work.
Each week, Amgalan Chin introduces a single, carefully chosen aged shu pu’er, often from his own travels across Inner Mongolia and Yunnan — a 2008 Měnghǎi brick, a 2010 Xiàguān tuo, a quiet 2012 Yìwǔ loose leaf. He mails a 25-gram sample to every participant. The week’s task is simple: brew the tea, record the experience. No prescribed dosage, no mandatory timing — but a set of suggested frameworks drawn from the constellation of Teamotea resources. For those curious about the underlying caffeine curve, the cohort points to the live chart at tea.energy/caffeine-curve. For anyone wanting to understand the lab-tested polyphenol profile of similar shu samples, the published analyses at tea.doctor/lab offer a data layer without ever turning into a claim.
The rhythm is steady. First block — weeks one through four — grounds us in the sensory and technical: how shu changes with water temperature, steep duration, and vessel material, and what that means when a heavy squat session is scheduled ninety minutes later. Participants log focus, jitters, stomach feel, and any shift in inter-set recovery. Amgalan hosts a weekly live tasting and discussion, recorded for those who train late. These calls are conversational, not didactic. He might share notes on a decades-old Shēng Pǔ’ěr (生普洱) stored in Buryatia, or compare the body of a cold-brewed shu to a hot gongfu infusion — always returning to the cohort’s central question: what do I actually notice?
In the middle block — weeks five through nine — the log widens. Athletes experiment with intra-set hydration, using cold-brewed shu in insulated bottles, and with evening consumption to observe sleep quality markers. The cohort’s shared channel on tea.community becomes a quiet archive of anecdotal data: a powerlifter notes deeper sleep after a 7pm session with 2007 Líncāng Shu Zhuān; a weightlifter finds a 2005 Nánnuò Shān Shēng too stimulating. No one is correct; everyone is reading carefully.
The final block — weeks ten through thirteen — turns toward synthesis and personal protocol. Athletes sketch their own year-round tea integration, using the hydration calculator from tea.fitness, the water guide from tea.equipment, and the brewing precision of tea.school. Amgalan offers one-on-one feedback on each final reflection. Throughout, the cohort is less a course and more a container for sustained attention — an invitation to treat a simple leaf as a training partner, observed with the same rigour we bring to a barbell.
Week by week
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Week 1 — 2010 Xiàguān Shú Chá (下关熟茶). Setting the baseline: tasting notes, brewing parameters, and introduction to the personal logbook.
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Week 2 — 2008 Měnghǎi Shú Bǐng (勐海熟饼). Pre-workout timing: consuming the tea 45 minutes before a session and tracking mental clarity during warm-up sets.
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Week 3 — 2012 Yìwǔ Shú Zhuān (易武熟砖). Intra-set hydration: cold-brew shu pu’er with a pinch of sea salt, sipped between heavy compound lifts.
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Week 4 — 2006 Líncāng Shú Bǐng (临沧熟饼). Comparative preparation: gongfu vs western brewing and their subjective impact on the energy curve across a full workout.
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Week 5 — 2009 Bān Zhāng Shú Chá (班章熟茶). Strength session focus: observing sustained concentration during three heavy singles and back-off sets.
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Week 6 — 2011 Gǒngmíng Shú Bǐng (贡茗熟饼). Recovery window: drinking shu immediately post-session versus waiting one hour — logging perceived muscle soreness over two days.
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Week 7 — 2007 Níngwǔ Shú Zhī (宁武熟沱). Sleep quality and evening shu: timing the last cup and tracking sleep onset, depth, and morning readiness.
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Week 8 — 2013 Fènghuáng Shú Chá (凤凰熟茶). Active recovery day: combining lighter gongfu sessions with mobility work and parasympathetic breathing.
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Week 9 — 2005 Nánnuò Shān Shēng Bǐng (南糯山生饼). Introducing aged sheng: how a 20-year raw pu’er differs in pre-workout feel — a week of dual log entries.
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Week 10 — 2014 Jǐngmài Shú Bǐng (景迈熟饼). Hydration protocol: using the tea.fitness calculator to dial in ml per kg bodyweight with tea as the base.
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Week 11 — 2010 Yǒulè Shú Zhuān (攸乐熟砖). Double session day: a morning heavy session with shu, and evening technique work with a milder steep — cross-comparing logs.
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Week 12 — 2008 Báohé Shú Chá (宝和熟茶). Comparative subjective recovery: developing a personal 1–10 scale for tea-supported recovery weeks.
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Week 13 — 2012 Líncāng Bái Chá Bǐng (临沧白茶饼). Synthesis: integrating the quarterly log into a year-round training rhythm and writing the final reflection.
What’s included
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Thirteen curated aged shu pu’er samples (25g each), selected and mailed by Amgalan Chin.
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Private cohort discussion channel hosted on tea.community — a calm, threaded forum free from algorithmic noise.
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Weekly live tasting and comparative log review with Amgalan Chin, recorded for those training late.
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Detailed brewing and timing reference PDF, created in collaboration with the tea.doctor lab for contextual data.
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Access to the live caffeine curve and sport-context overlay at tea.energy, with cohort-specific log fields.
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Cohort-exclusive water quality and mineral adjustment guide from tea.equipment.
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One 20-minute individual reflection session with Amgalan Chin during the final two weeks.
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Early access to new tea.fitness protocol releases for one year after cohort completion.
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A 10% discount on the monthly subscription box at shop.thetea.app for the duration of the program.