At this time, the annual output of Ganhe tea reached 8-65438+10,000 boxes, which were sold to Guangdong, Hunan and other places. By the 31st year of Guangxu (1905), the sales of Ganhe tea had soared to more than 200,000 cases, and the Genji brothers could not help but sigh that "Ganhe tea has grown up". The Genji family canceled the pigment industry and decided to specialize in Ganhe tea in Foshan, and officially named the store as Yuanjilin. The dry river tea produced was officially named Yuanjilin dry river tea, and the decoration of red, green and black cartons was also fixed, thus finalizing a famous product.
In addition to being sold in Guangdong, Guangxi, Fujian, Hunan, Yunnan, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Macao, the "Chinatown" where overseas Chinese live in Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, the Philippines, Cambodia, Myanmar, Indonesia, the United States and Canada also sells Jilin Ganhe tea. During the war turmoil, the Genji family also had a dispute over rights and interests, and Yuanji Linganhe tea began to be produced and sold separately in Foshan, Hong Kong and Singapore. Today, there are still sales points of Jilin Ganhe tea in Southeast Asia and areas where Chinese people live in the world.