Winemakers open a cafe (NZ)

Winemakers open a cafe (NZ)

The owners of Rock Ferry Wines have literally opened up their home to create a cellar door and cafe. The Hammerichs Rd property was the private home of Rock Ferry Wines co-owners Tom and Fiona Hutchison for about eight years, reports The Marlborough Express. Mr Hutchison said while they lived there they often thought how it would be an ideal place to open up a cafe and cellar door.

Only the strong will survive

Take a drive through the Hunter Valley and the mid-north coast hinterland at the moment to see verdant green hillsides, lush paddocks and rivers in full flow. It’s a wonderful sight. Every so often, there’s a pocket that’s less pretty. A place where leaves are, literally, withering on the vine. What you are seeing are the consequences of a world oversupplied with wine. For the local grower it is a world not helped by a strong Australian dollar. It’s a time when every vine has to earn its keep or else, writes Sue Bennett in the weekend Sydney Morning Herald.

Murray Darling Basin: work together on water

More than two million Australians live within the Murray-Darling Basin. That’s only about a tenth of Australia’s population, yet this area includes some of our biggest regional centres and accounts for a whopping 40 per cent of all food and fibre grown in Australia. The wheat grown in southern QLD, the cattle grazed in western NSW, the rice farmed in the Riverina and the wine produced in VIC and SA are all part of the Basin – which means all Australians, regardless of where they live, are impacted by what happens here, writes CEO of the National Farmers Federation, Matt Linnegar, on ABC’s The Drum website.

Push to exclude vineyards from gas exploration

Hundreds of hectares of prime wine producing land should be excised from gas company AGL’s exploration licence areas before they are renewed, Hunter vignerons and coal seam gas opponents say in a joint appeal. The Hunter Valley Wine Industry Association and the Hunter Valley Protection Alliance want the vineyard areas excluded if the government grants a renewal. AGL’s petroleum exploration licence area, or PEL 267, covers the wine and tourism areas of Broke Fordwich and Pokolbin and expires on January 19. AGL says it has applied for a renewal, reports The Newcastle Herald.

London’s first Italian wine specialist opens (UK)

London’s first specialist Italian wine merchant has opened with the biggest selection of Italian wines in the country. Vini Italiani in the upmarket district of South Kensington is run by a group of Italian entrepreneurs and lists more than 500 wines from Italy. All 20 Italian regions are represented, with some 100 wines listed in each of Piedmont and Tuscany. Opening just before Christmas, co-founder Matteo Berlucchi told Decanter it was too early to have an idea of the popularity or otherwise of certain lines.

A vine romance with Chardonnay (NZ)

Wine snobs and doubters, listen up – Chardonnay is getting its mojo back. Sure, it’s not about to overtake our industry darling, Sauvignon Blanc, any time soon, but it is increasingly finding favour as a sophisticated and elegant alternative, capable of holding its own in the finest company. You only have to look at the wine awards to see how Chardonnay is winning attention, reports Fairfax NZ News.

Changing exchange rate costs wine industry millions (NZ)

The wine industry is losing $80 million a year in exchange rate fluctuations, prompting an industry spokesman to call for “sensible monetary policy”. A strategic review of the $1.1 billion wine industry by PriceWaterhouseCoopers said exchange rate changes since 2007 were robbing the sector of tens of millions of dollars annually, reports Fairfax NZ News.

Exports focus for ambassador (NZ)

Growing the relationship between the Philippines and New Zealand, especially for exporters, will be the aim of former Blenheim man and ambassador designate to the Philippines Reuben Levermore, reports The Marlborough Express. Exporters, including those in the wine industry, had a lot of room to grow business, which the embassy could help with, Mr Levermore said. “As people become more wealthy and their tastes evolve there will be more opportunities for New Zealand,” he said.

Tide rises for next great white wine

Many say the world’s only truly noble grape variety is due for its day in the sun. The signs along the shoulder of the Main North Road from Leasingham to Watervale in South Australia said it all: “Grapes for Sale”. More specifically: “Riesling Grapes for Sale”. The village of Watervale is, as its own sign proudly states, “The Home of Fine Riesling”. It is known around the world for its fine, delicate, gently aromatic and long-lived Riesling wines, reports The Australian Financial Review. But it’s tough out there. And Riesling, despite all the fine words written about it, doesn’t grab the wine-drinking public’s imagination as much as it does that of the wine cognoscenti.

Predictions of a vintage crop for Aussie wines

Winemakers in the Hunter Valley are cautiously optimistic about what could be one of the best vintages in years, especially for whites. Thanks to last month’s heavy rainfall, winemakers say conditions have been perfect for an outstanding vintage — but only if it doesn’t rain much before harvest, reports The Daily Telegraph. “As it turns out we’ve had particularly cool ripening weather,” Hunter Valley Wine Industry Association president Andrew Margan said. “It was the coldest December in Cessnock on record.”

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