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Welcome to our journal. This is where you'll find an account of our journey into terroir, viticulture, geology, organics, biodynamics, regenerative agriculture and all sorts of other fun (aka nerdy) things that we think about.

 

Dan Coward
 
26 October 2021 | Dan Coward

Ep45: Charlie Arnott's Regenerative Journey podcast - with Amelia Nolan

After an inspiring couple of days of biodynamic workshopping, Amelia sat down with Charlie Arnott for a yarn. As the sun set (in the west 😊) over the Alkina Old Quarter Homestead Amelia talked Charlie through her experiences, thoughts and learnings gleaned from a career in wine and a lifetime of travel.

It has all led up to the present day and this wonderful project here at Alkina, which employs so many of those learnings in how and why we farm the way we do, and what it means to be truly connected to the land.

If you haven’t tuned in to ‘The Regenerative Journey’ before, now is the time to change that. Charlie is a gentleman and a great communicator. So many great podcasts up there, especially the recent one with our friend Rebecca Sullivan of Warndu.

You can access the podcast via Charlie's website here, or just stream it via your podcast app. Enjoy!

Time Posted: 26/10/2021 at 11:26 AM Permalink to Ep45: Charlie Arnott's Regenerative Journey podcast - with Amelia Nolan Permalink
Dan Coward
 
28 May 2021 | Dan Coward

Catch up wth Alkina on Channel 7's SA Weekender

If you missed our appearance on Channel 7's SA Weekender a few weeks back, here's another chance. Enjoy!

Time Posted: 28/05/2021 at 10:24 AM Permalink to Catch up wth Alkina on Channel 7's SA Weekender Permalink
Dan Coward
 
19 May 2021 | Dan Coward

Vintage 2021

(The vintage surprise: Red and White Semillon harvested together from one of our young blocks)

2021 represents an outstanding vintage for Alkina across our 43 hectares of organic and biodynamically grown vines in northern Greenock. We have seen elevated levels of natural acidity, tannin, flavour and colour thanks to the long, cool later part of the growing season.

Good early winter and early spring rains raised hopes of good soil moisture levels but overall this didn’t quite follow through and it was a dry season again. Post Christmas we were blessed with cool, even days and a long, slow, even ripening period where phenolic development was in line with both sugars and flavour.

We started picking Semillon on 20th February (a couple of days later than V20, which was early) and finished with Mataro on 31st March. We had a two week burst of busy picking at the start and then cool nights slowed everything down. Yields were very good for everything except Grenache, which suffered some losses during a hot, windy flowering period. Quality looks to be excellent across the board with firm tannins and intense flavour concentration suggesting these will be wines with very long futures ahead of them.

Time Posted: 19/05/2021 at 2:22 PM Permalink to Vintage 2021 Permalink
Dan Coward
 
11 February 2021 | Dan Coward

TASTING AUSTRALIA - Alkina Long Lunch with Charlie Arnott and Mark McNamara - Wed 5th May - SOLD OUT

TASTING AUSTRALIA: Alkina Long Lunch with Charlie Arnott and Mark McNamara - Wed 5th May, 11:00am – 4pm. Ticket: $175 - SOLD OUT

Discover Alkina, meet Charlie Arnott, enjoy a delicious long lunch and learn about organic and biodynamic winegrowing in Greenock in the Barossa's Western Ranges.

You'll walk the vineyard rows and explore soil pits, before enjoying canapés and a tasting of Alkina's rarest terroir wines. Alkina has undertaken a unique and detailed terroir study to identify tiny parcels of old vine Grenache and Shiraz planted on different rock and soils types within the vineyard. We hand pick and vinify these 'Polygons' separately and you'll be able to taste these special wines, see the rocks and understand the special relationship between place and wine.

Then it's onto a long table in the Courtyard for a fabulous 3 course meal cooked over fire by Barossa legend, Mark McNamara, featuring the very best local Barossa and SA produce and suppliers. With Alkina's wines matched to the food and with magnums flowing, we'll enjoy a yarn with Charlie as we go.

Charlie is an award-winning grazier from Boorowa, New South Wales, Australia, an educator and passionate advocate for Regenerative Farming practices. His family business has developed under Charlie’s guidance from a ‘conventional’, industrial high input mixed enterprise farm working against nature to a biodynamically principled holistically managed farm partnering with nature. His podcast - The Regenerative Journey - is compulsive listening.

Having only recently opened, Alkina is a new story on an old place. It’s a journey through ancient stones and soils, organic and biodynamic viticulture, small scale winemaking and the creation of unique micro-terroir wines, all grown and made on our estate in the Western Barossa ranges. Alkina seeks to make wine that is an expression of place; pure, authentic, terroir wines from healthy vines in healthy soils. Alkina sits on the traditional lands of the Ngadjuri people. We acknowledge the Ngadjuri people as the traditional owners of this land and we pay our respects to elders past, present and emerging.

Tasting Australia: Alkina Long Lunch with Charlie Arnott and Mark McNamara

Wed 5th May

11:00am – 4pm

Ticket: $175 SOLD OUT

Dietary Requirements catered for.

Return transport can be arranged from Adelaide (at extra cost).

Time Posted: 11/02/2021 at 11:17 AM Permalink to TASTING AUSTRALIA - Alkina Long Lunch with Charlie Arnott and Mark McNamara - Wed 5th May - SOLD OUT Permalink
Dan Coward
 
1 January 2021 | Dan Coward

2021...with a sense of wonder

(Photograph: Mike Smith)

2020 has gone. I think we’re all okay with that idea. It was a big year for Alkina, coming to life after 6 years of building behind the scenes. But we look forward…

What of 2021 and beyond? What are we changing, building, challenging right now? We’re already well into our terroir journey but there is a mountain of learning still to do.

As a winemaker you get one chance each year. You have to take your chance, take risks, learn from failures and then build up your knowledge base for the year ahead.

In the vineyard you get a new chance every day. Granted you can’t see the fruit of your labours until harvest time, but every day you can see the life in the vineyard and in the soil. All you have to do is look. Look and ask yourself questions.  

Tim was working in the vineyard one night, on the Kubota, lights on. He tells the tale that the air was so thick with bugs, flies, mosquitos and spiders webs that it was like another world. What a magical thing, to have a vineyard literally swamped with life? You can’t necessarily see it all during the daytime but you can feel it. You can feel the energy. 

We can't make terroir-driven wines in dead soils. We can't control everything in the vineyard, and that's okay. We can observe, learn and adapt, working in harmony with nature rather than seeking dominion over it. 

David Orr, the Paul Sears Distinguished Professor of Environmental Studies and Politics Emeritus at Oberlin College in Ohio wrote “If literacy is driven by the search for knowledge, ecological literacy is driven by the sense of wonder, the sheer delight in being alive in a beautiful, mysterious, bountiful world.” 

So before we get into the detail of what we’re up to, it’s worth taking a moment on New Year’s Day to remember that ‘sense of wonder’ in our lives. Where do you see it? Where are you looking? We always try to remember it when we’re working in the vineyard, however hard it is, or however crushing the latest obstacle is. For here lays the basis of terroir, in its most wondrous, natural iteration.

Time Posted: 01/01/2021 at 4:33 AM Permalink to 2021...with a sense of wonder Permalink
Dan Coward
 
23 December 2020 | Dan Coward

Two Day Introduction to Biodynamics @ Alkina - 3/4 May 2021


 

BOOK NOW

Join hosts Charlie Arnott (Farmer, Educator, Host of 'The Regenerative Journey' podcast) and Hamish Mackay (Biodynamics2024) for two memorable days of hands on learning at Alkina.

Bioydynamics is grounded in the work of Rudolf Steiner, inspired by questions, conversations, practical research and eight lectures with the title, The Spiritual Foundations for the Development of Agriculture (June 1924).

Biodynamics is a contemporary, cost-effective and proven method that produces high-quality food and fibre, as well as healthy animals and premium products, while achieving regenerative outcomes in all forms of agriculture (animal husbandry, horticultre, silviculture, etc.) and home gardens. Proven regenerative outcomes are : increased organic matter, water retention, soil and animal fertility, soil foodweb balance and soil sequestration of atmospheric carbon. 

This introductory workshop brings together the art and science of biodynamics,  the 'how and why' biodynamic preparations work, and the practical skills you need to start applying them as soon as you get home. 

We will cover : 

  • The life of the soil
  • Creating soil fertility
  • Managing your natural resources
  • Practical application of the biodynamic preparations
  • Developing risk management of your land ( weeds, pests, diseases)
  • Meeting the challenges of climate change ( drought, floods, carbon sequestration)

This workshop will lay the foundation for the hands-on Biodynamic Preparation-Making course held each spring and autumn. Here you will learn how to make season preparations, deepen your understanding of how to apply them to sustain regenerative ecological outcomes and increase the health of the soil, plants, animals and the wider environment. 

Cost :

Early bird ticket - $550 pp (Book and pay before 1 March 2021)

Multiple participants from one family or business. BGWA members discounted rate - $440 pp

Intro to Biodynamics Graduate - $220 pp 

Single participant - $660 pp (From 2 March)

Workshop fees include lunch, morning and afternoon teas on both days.  Additionally, it entitles you to attend monthly Biodynamics2024 webinars with Hamish and Charlie as well as access to the Biodynamics Alumni Facebook group. 

Hamish and Charlie look forward to sharing their enthusiasm and passion for Biodynamics and lead you through this two-day, interactive, hands-on and engaging programme. 

Location : Alkina, 41 Victor Road, Greenock, SA 5360

BOOK NOW

THIS IS THE RESCHEDULED EVENT FROM DECEMBER 2020

Time Posted: 23/12/2020 at 3:30 PM Permalink to Two Day Introduction to Biodynamics @ Alkina - 3/4 May 2021 Permalink Comments for Two Day Introduction to Biodynamics @ Alkina - 3/4 May 2021 Comments (2)
Dan Coward
 
12 December 2020 | Dan Coward

We’re digging…but where to?

Alkina is a big idea. The more we chase it, the more we try to define it, then the bigger this idea becomes.

We don’t know all the answers.

We don’t even know half of the questions.

What we do know, however, is that making good wine and putting it in a smart bottle isn’t enough for us. It might not be enough for a lot of drinkers anymore either. What a glass of wine tastes like is still crucial…but increasingly what that glass of wine stands for is catching up. 

Alkina is a 60 hectare farm, upon which we now have 43 hectares of vines with younger plantings accompanying the old. We focus on the Barossa’s heritage varieties that have found their natural home in the region – Grenache, Shiraz, Mataro and Semillon. We grow and make all Alkina wines on the farm, hand picking the grapes and moving them all of 200m to our small winery. The entire farm is managed using organic and biodynamic principles and two thirds of the farm was certified by NASAA (National Association for Sustainable Agriculture Australia) in 2018. The remaining third is farmed exactly the same way and is awaiting certification. 

Our approach to winemaking is based on identifying, picking and separately vinifying a wide range of micro-terroirs. Over the course of this blog we’ll dissect this as we try to develop our understanding.

Working with terroir specialist Pedro Parra, we were able to map areas of the vineyard to reveal very specific parcels of vines that are unique in their geologies, each being on predominantly limestone, schist or clay bases. These small areas, some as small as 0.3ha in size, we call Polygons; and each has a unique and special character. We work with winemaker, Alberto Antonini, to either blend together the Polygons that complement each other or to keep separate the Polygons that stand firmly on their own. 

Central to all of our endeavours are soil health and plant and microbial diversity. We have cut out all synthetic chemicals and sought to understand the principles of regenerative agriculture and how they apply to a vineyard. This approach allows complex ecosystems above and below ground to develop naturally and flourish. A healthy, happy vineyard should be teeming with life. Nature loves complexity and abhors monoculture. 

Regenerative agriculture is a process of learning, trialling, problem solving and hopefully, ultimately, understanding. It takes a mindset shift, to say the least. Well we have made that commitment and we hope to be able to bring you along for the ride too.

Time Posted: 12/12/2020 at 3:46 AM Permalink to We’re digging…but where to? Permalink Comments for We’re digging…but where to? Comments (3)