Saturday, July 14, 2007

Rural tea-rooms seek geisha girls

Geishas are being sought to serve up green tea in cafes in rural Cumbria.

The Lake District is popular with Japanese tourists and there are hopes for a further wave of interest once the film Miss Potter opens in Japan.

Cumbria Tourism has translated a map of tea-serving places off the beaten track, into Japanese, and is hosting a Green Tea Day on 19 July and cafes on the tea trail are advertising for geishas to assist with the intricacies of the tea ceremony.

Geisha Wanted

Applicants could also help translate some of the trickier recipe names, such as "tarty tarn drizzle" into Japanese.

Fully-trained geishas are a dying breed and would charge up to £7,000 to fly across from Japan, so the tourist organisation is hoping there might be some local expert keen to put their skills into practice.

Annie Swarbrick, owner of the Greystoke Cycle Cafe, and spokeswoman for the tea trail, said: "We don't think there are that many advertisements for geishas out there, so we hope to get some good applications."

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