About Winery and Wines

Jacques was looking for a large property offering a combination of agricultural and vineyard potential. The property had to be on north-facing slopes with heritage vegetation. A 300-hectare property located near Parndana in Kangaroo Island’s heartland came up for sale and with the help of the Paxton team an 11-hectare vineyard was planted in the year 2000 with varieties Jacques had enjoyed working with around the world - cabernet franc, malbec, sangiovese, shiraz, grenache, viognier and semillon. Close spacing (5000 vines per hectare) with vertical canopy was chosen for all the varieties except grenache and shiraz which were planted in bush vines at 1900 vines per hectare. The close spacing of vines is a quality control factor - limiting the yield per vine helps achieve greater concentration of flavour and phenolic compounds. The aim for production is 1kg of grapes per vine per vintage. The soils are quite friable which allows for easy vine root penetration – very important when establishing a new vineyard – with pockets of clay helping to retain water. Jacques considers the soils to be quite similar to those of Fitou in Languedoc-Rousillon, Southern France. He finds Kangaroo Island to be a very interesting place to grow grapes as there is an immense amount of variation in terroir: soils, rainfall, aspect and winemaking style, all of which influence the resulting wine.