Western Australia's Great Southern wine region is the most remote in Australia but it produces some of the best-value wines.
Close
to the
Southern and Indian oceans, the region has warm and sunny days during
the growing season, but cool - sometimes cold - nights. The
moderate temperatures slow the ripening of grapes and produce wines
of excellent balance.
The
Great Southern is the largest appellation in mainland Australia
(second only to Tasmania overall) and it stretches unevenly
over an area of 150km from north to south and 100km across east to
west.
There
are five very different sub-regions: Albany, Denmark, Frankland
River, the Porongurups and Mount Barker.
Albany
and Denmark are maritime sub-regions, close to the oceans, while the
inland sub-regions comprise warmer Mount Barker, Porongurup and
Frankland River. Wherever you are in this remote region, however, you
are around 400
kilometres and a five-hour drive from the state capital of Perth.
“You
can travel just 50 kilometres in this part of the world and you will
find growing conditions that are completely different,” says Coby
Ladwig, winemaker at Rockcliffe in Denmark (above).
Larry
Cherubino, who sources fruit from several sites in the Great
Southern, believes site selection is of prime importance to
producing premium quality wines.
“Over
the years I reckon I’ve got a pretty good handle on what works
where,” Cherubino says. “Everything I do reflects my strong
belief that when you get the right varieties in the right sites,
you’re well on your way to making good wine.”
Great Southern
riesling, usually citrusy with brisk acid, is exceptional and rivals
that of Clare and Eden. Plantagenet winemaker Chris Murtha describes
them as “intense and pure”.
Shiraz
from the region is also on the upswing. You won't find Barossa-style
blockbusters here; the styles tend to be
more focused on juicy fruit and savoury/spice notes. Murtha says they
have “lovely pepper and spice”. Expect fruit-driven, tight reds
with some regional elegance.
Former Ferngrove
winemaker Kim Horton, who departed after the 2015 vintage,
characterises Great Southern fruit as “very clean; almost
pristine”.
And the good news for
consumers is that wines from the Great Southern are generally more
affordable than those from Margaret River – although a lot of Great
Southern fruit does head further west to be used in blends.
Frankland River, home
to Frankland Estate (below), Alkoomi and Ferngrove is the Great Southern's
riesling hot spot – thanks to its warmish days and cool nights.
“Frankland
River is the coolest and most isolated wine-growing region in Western
Australia,” says Hunter Smith from Frankland Estate, which is
certified organic and uses sustainable agriculture.
“Like
many winemakers we subscribe to the view that great wines are made in
the vineyard, not the winery. We look to the soils in our vineyards
to provide the foundation for healthy vines, intensely flavoured
fruit and wines that articulate the distinctive features of the
environment in which they are grown.”
Many of the wineries,
including West Cape Howe at Mount Barker, source fruit from several
different sub-regions and then blend.
Winemaker Gavin Berry
uses fruit primarily from Mount Barker but also from Albany and
Frankland, as well as from Margaret River – a four-hour drive away.
Berry has celebrated 25
vintages in the Great Southern and he and his wife Gill Graham also
operate the Mount Trio vineyard in the elevated Porongurups
sub-region, which was planted in 1989. Berry sees riesling and
chardonnay as the regional standouts.
Given the high profile
of wineries like Castle Rock, Galafrey, Forest Hill, Rockcliffe and
others, it seems amazing the Great Southern wine industry is so young
compared to much of the rest of Australia.
It was only in 1975 that Plantagenet Wines purchased an
apple-packing shed in Mount Barker and converted the building into a
winery that made the region's first commercial wines.
Plantagenet
and Alkoomi (where they use no herbicides and pesticides in their
vineyards), are two of the local pioneers enjoying success.
Today the wine
industry is thriving and the Great Southern produces 37% of all the wine grapes in Western
Australia.
The producers range
from 200,000 case wineries like Ferngrove to tiny producers like La
Violetta, Bunn Vineyard and Snake and Herring.
At small wineries like
family-owned Galafrey in Mount Barker,(above), you can meet Henry, the winery
dog, who will greet you at the car park and escort you to the cellar
door, while at organic producer Oranje Tractor outside Albany, you
can enjoy a home-made pizza on the deck with the winery workers.
Galafrey winemaker Kim
Tyrer says she's a workaholic because “little things make the
difference between good and great wine”. You'll often also find her
behind the tasting bar.
Whichever cellar door
you pop into in the Great Southern there's a pretty good chance you
will get to meet the winemaker or owner - like Rob Wignall at Wignalls.
Denmark, cute with
cafes and chocolate shops, is probably the tourist hubs of the Great
Southern; the wines from the likes of newcomers Byron and Harold, as
well as the Great Southern outpost of Margaret River's Howard
Park/Madfish. Wines from Harewood Estate, Singlefile, Lake House and
Forest Hill are worth seeking out.
Also
head further afield to taste Rob Diletti's outstanding wines at
Castle Rock, and to Xabregas on Porongurup Road. If time is short
there is a huge range of local wines in the bottle shop adjacent to
Due South restaurant in Albany.
Albany
is a five-hours drive from Perth via Albany Highway. Virgin
Australia
operates daily flights to Albany from Perth International Airport
Terminal 2. www.virginaustralia.com.au.
The
next annual Taste
Great Southern
food and wine festival will be held from February 18-March 27, 2016 and offers a range of food and wine experiences.
www.greatsoutherntastewa.com.
Australia’s
Great South West has visitor centres in all major towns in the
region. www.australiassouthwest.com.
Or
see
www.amazingalbany.com.au.
# This is an edited version of a story that originally appeared in Selector Magazine.
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