S.X. Albert makes a living ceremoniously taking visitors around the High Field tea estate. The tea factory stands on the crest of a hill surrounded by rolling carpets of knitted green flecked with the slowly moving figures of the tea-pickers, whose smallness against the landscape makes their task seem Herculean. Judging from Albert's account, the business of tea appears, at first, to be all about statistics. The estate is a hundred years old and covers an area of 2,000 acres. Five thousand kilos of tea are produced per acre per year. New leaves appear on the tea bushes every 15 days. Bushes have to be pruned every five years, otherwise the tea plant, says Albert, holding up a dried-up specimen, will turn into a tree. There are 260 tea factories in the Nilgiris of which 40 are government-owned and the rest are private.


