Over at Xanadu Wines, winemaker Brendan Carr points to the two halves of the winemaking operation – the vineyard and the winery – and the need for them to think about what each is doing in vintage. “If you’re from the vineyard and you’ve just finished your last harvest it’s that final dot point on vintage, before post vintage jobs start and then getting busy again with pruning. Vintage for the vineyard crew is really through the growing season, running at a million miles an hour, keeping an eye on the weather, lifting wires when they need to.“
While bound by what happens in the vineyard Carr is focused on the winery. He’s well aware of this and makes sure that the different crews understand that they’re essentially working to a common goal. “We watch the weather in the winery but the vineyard and the winery march to a different drum beat in those respects,” he says. “We try to ensure that the people in the winery understand the vineyard and that there’s an appreciation of what it took for the fruit to get there in the first place. The years long worth of work to get it onto a vine and then into a bucket, and hopefully teach the vineyard guys that once it’s in the bucket it’s only half way through the process.”
Once that vineyard work is done Willcock says that this is essentially “relief number one” as when the grapes are off the vine “I’m like oh I don’t have to eat grapes for another year”. But then starts the second wave. She explains, “this is probably the most stressful time I’m going through, trying to get the reds off skins at the right time and bedded down into the right barrels.”