2018 Vintage Snapshot

South Australia

James Halliday by James Halliday

2018 Vintage Snapshot: South Australia

Barossa Valley

The Barossa Valley was affected by some protracted hot weather in January and February, causing the vines to shut down, and it took time for ripening to pick up the pace after the conclusion of the heatwaves in early March. Once it did, the second half of March and through to the end of April provided perfect ripening conditions, with shiraz and grenache showing particular promise, with great colour and flavour.

Eden Valley and Clare Valley

Eden Valley and Clare Valley riesling will be site specific, the higher and/or cooler sites performing best. One conservative vigneron rates 2018 as the fourth consecutive exceptionally good riesling vintage, close in quality to the great ’17 vintage.


Adelaide Hills

The Adelaide Hills, normally a haven, required vigilance to reduce stress and keep a healthy canopy. The Indian summer at the end of March and early April put the ship back on course, and chardonnay, pinot noir and shiraz are the standout varieties. Overall quality is strong, comparable to ’13 and ’16. 

Adelaide Plains

Adelaide Plains inevitably had to manage some very high temperatures once the new year rolled by. Overall, yields will be 20–30% down, red wines faring best with great colour and depth of flavour.

McLaren Vale

For McLaren Vale, the standout was a disappearance of rain after the ’17 year. From October to March 30% of the average rainfall was experienced, and there were higher maximum and minimum temperatures compared to normal. The vines managed to survive these challenges, although smaller berry size will be reasonably widespread. One noted producer was honest enough to suggest that red wines will be deeply coloured but may lack richness. The other common feature was periods of heat, followed by cooler weather in which the vines simply remained quasi-dormant.

Langhorne Creek

Langhorne Creek has its vast water-based air conditioning system that largely buffered the heat spikes that caused problems elsewhere in southeastern Australia. Rainfall was low (no disease pressure) but enough to sustain vine health. Cabernet sauvignon and petit verdot, with moderate yields of excellent quality, are the standouts.

Kangaroo Island

From the last few days of December until April 13, not a single drop of rain fell in Kangaroo Island. Combined with 10 days of temperatures peaking over 40°C, things looked pretty desperate until the conditions cooled down at the end of February; thereafter the vines recovered very slowly, coupled with a slow increase in baumes.

Coonawarra

In the Limestone Coast Zone, Coonawarra expects the vintage will produce 50% of normal volume, combining fruit losses from the November 4 frost and poor set from the cold conditions. 


Mount Benson and Robe

Mount Benson and Robe think that 10% will be lost overall, some vignerons suffering more than others.

Padthaway

Reports from Padthaway range form no impact to more than 10%, the latter case depending on frost protection measures being in place.

Wrattonbully

Wrattonbully is ecstatic about the vintage. There is, however, uniformity in the expectations of highly aromatic and fresh white varieties (sauvignon blanc and chardonnay standouts), remembering that some regions have negligible plantings of white varieties. The expectation from all is that cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc and shiraz will all produce intensely coloured and intensely flavoured wines with controlled tannin and extract. The November 4 frost extended as far as the Grampians to the east of the Limestone Coast.

Riverland

Riverland had an armchair ride, the weather up to harvest very favourable after a cool and wet spring. The yields are average, with a good balance between berry size and quantit. The best varieties are chardonnay and shiraz, the overall quality very good thanks to very low disease pressure.