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Reviews

Well worth the extra trek into the...

8/21/16
Well worth the extra trek into the countryside. The sparkling wines are a must to try. If you can, take one if the wine tours add you will learn about the fascinating history of the company and how it started. Bonus points for their lovable dog, Carla.
Source: google Mez Pahlan

Very relaxing hour spent sipping a lovely...

8/18/16
Very relaxing hour spent sipping a lovely glass of British bubbles.
Source: google Matthew Berrill

Beautifully kept, alot of hard work put...

6/18/16
Beautifully kept, alot of hard work put in here, a real credit to them! :)
Source: google Carrabine Joinery Ltd

Loved our visit to Camel Valley winery...

1/3/16
Loved our visit to Camel Valley winery early November 2015. Great tasting and thought the wines were excellent. The sparkling wines are great examples. But the wine of the day for my visit there was the Bacchus Dry. Fresh crisp white with great fruit on the nose and the palate with nice acidity. Definitely worth a visit, great setting.
Source: google Jamie Forrest

I went to this winery a long...

12/31/13
I went to this winery a long time back, 2005 to be exact, and am glad to see it's still thriving. Excellent wines and so great to see a British business doing well in this arena.
Source: google Ben McMinn
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About Winery and Wines

When ex-RAF pilot Bob Lindo and his wife Annie planted their first eight thousand vines in 1989, they never dreamed of the phenomenal success they would achieve within 2 decades. They had bought their farm in the heart of the Cornish countryside several years earlier, seeking a change from service life and the perfect place to bring up their young family, and initially farmed sheep and cattle. Each summer they watched the grass turn brown on the sun-drenched slopes of the Camel Valley, and wondered if vines might enjoy such an aspect. Bob ‘did a vintage' in Germany and both took viticulture courses and read every vine and wine book they could find. They built a winery and equipped it with the finest equipment they could afford. Annie is the first to admit the early years weren't easy: ‘We practically lived in the vineyard, doing all the work by hand, and when it came to harvest time it was just us and a few friends for picking, then Bob would stay up all night crushing the grapes. But we loved it, always striving for perfection in the vineyard and the winery, and then we won a medal in the national English Wine competition for our first wine, so we knew we were doing something right.'