Gibbston Valley Winery Celebrates 25th Anniversary Vintage
Gibbston Valley Winery Celebrates 25th Anniversary
Vintage as ‘One of the Best Yet’
A
dream run of summer and autumn weather producing high
quality fruit has pioneering wine company Gibbston Valley
Winery predicting an outstanding 2012 vintage.
This
year the winery is celebrating the 25th anniversary of the
first commercial harvest of grapes in New Zealand’s
Central Otago after picking 300 tonnes of intensely
flavoured fruit.
Defying critics who described the
land as “too cold and too far South”, founder Alan Brady
was the first to plant and commercially produce wines in
Gibbston Valley, harvesting pinot noir, pinot gris and a
‘dry white’ blend in 1987.
Twenty-five years
later, he returned to the multi-award-winning and
world-renowned winery to help harvest grapes in the original
block he planted.
“In those early days we
experimented by planting everything under the sun, and pinot
noir chose us, we didn’t choose it,” he
said.
“It ripened more consistently than any
other variety, and from that moment on we were in on the
ground floor of what became the pinot noir phenomenon,
what’s now the second-largest variety in New Zealand to
sauvignon blanc.
“Over the years we attracted
some of the best winemakers in New Zealand to come and work
with pinot noir, known as the ‘heartbreak grape’ because
it’s difficult to do and winemakers love the
challenge.
“Twenty-five years later I’m still
looking ahead because we’re producing wines of such
outstanding quality that fully reflect the uniqueness of
Central Otago, its climate and soils.”
Gibbston
Valley Winery winemaker Christopher Keys, who has been with
the company for the past six years, said he was delighted
with the 2012 vintage.
“In Central Otago we
enjoyed a long warm summer, which makes such a difference to
the quality of the pinot noir. Although in February and
early March there were cool patches, the long dry autumn and
great weather through March and April meant we picked really
lovely fruit, with really balanced sugar levels, great
flavour, and good acid levels.
“We’re very
happy with 2012’s quality, smaller bunches have given
welcome intensity, and flavours are
excellent.”
Mr Keys described this year's pinot
noir as having "sweet fruit, excellent balance and
ripeness," while the pinot gris, chardonnay and riesling
were as good as he'd seen. "What is setting them apart is
their amazing clarity and fresh intensity. They will give
great drinking for years," he said.
Mr Keys said Gibbston
Valley Winery was blessed to have had such a lovely harvest,
when conditions had not been so easy around the rest of the
country.
The reds are currently being pressed and
put to barrel, while the whites are finishing their
fermentation process.
Mr Keys said the strength of
Gibbston Valley Winery was in the quality of its eight
distinct vineyard sites. Bringing together grapes from the
pioneer Home Block vineyard in Gibbston to the heights of
School House in Bendigo, he said each gave different Central
Otago characteristics to the wine.
“We’re
committed to crafting wines that reflect who we are, the
proud owners of some of the oldest vineyards in the
region,” he said.
“Each and every glass of a
Gibbston Valley Winery pinot noir from the Single Vineyard
range tells a story of where this vineyard is, how high it
is, what its soils are like, what the climate is like, and
when it ripens.
“Add to that the story of the
land, who planted it and what they were dreaming – as with
Alan Brady’s Le Maitre pinot noir – and you have
something very uniquely different.
“Knowing that
each vineyard has a character, identity and uniqueness makes
preserving their array of flavours in the bottle a genuine
ongoing delight.”
Over the years, Gibbston Valley
Winery has won over 300 national and international awards,
helping put the Central Otago wine region on the map.
Thanks to the pioneering spirit of those such as
Gibbston Valley Winery founder Alan Brady, the Central Otago
region now has approximately 2000 hectares of vines and over
100 producers, and this year’s total harvest is expected
to be about 7000 tonnes.
Gibbston Valley Winery is
also home to a stunning winery restaurant, a cellar door
wine tasting facility, New Zealand’s largest and
innovative wine cave, available for wine tours, private
functions, weddings and special occasions, the new Barrel
Room for C&I functions and weddings, and a retail outlet.
ENDS