Weltevrede Estate



Why is this 2010 vintage the best ever?

Year after year all over the wine world you will find the new vintage being announced as the best ever. In some years winemakers and marketers have to delve deep to find reasons to rate the most recent vintage a brilliant year. You may find that in many cases it is only in retrospect, well after the last bottle has been sold, that some vintages in history are being described as less favourable. What is of course true is that we often don’t know until after a few years how good a vintage will turn out to be. 


It is impossible to start at the beginning as I wasn’t around in 1912 when my great-grandfather began the wine farming at Weltevrede, but for me 1997 was average. 1998 was excellent. 1999 was a nightmare. 2000 was good. 2001 was fantastic. 2002 was good. 2003 average. 2004 good. 2005 was rotten. 2006 was very good. 2007 was good. 2008 was a disaster. 2009 was one of the best. And 2010? Excellent, I believe.

 
Why do I say so? Firstly because we don’t know yet and there is no use being negative. Secondly, if I look back over the years the vintages that performed well had three things in common: They were small crops. They were healthy. The grapes had small berry sizes. And these factors are true of the 2010 vintage. It shows great promise. At the time of writing we have only picked the Pinot Noir and Chardonnay for the Cap Classique thus far and crops are considerably down with average bunch weight about a third down on last year. The Place of Rocks Chardonnay has minute golden berries with vibrant flavour intensity, ready to be harvested later this week. The Travelling Stone Sauvignon Blanc bears perfectly healthy fruit, set to present another great example of this vineyard and will possibly by ready for harvesting end of next week.
 
The 2010 harvest season will still continue till late March and things can change in a day’s time, but I think it is safe to announce, as always: The 2010 vintage is one of the best ever.

 

 

 

 

Nuns making wine on Weltevrede

 

They came from a place called Mbarara in Uganda. The Switzerland of Africa some say. They belong to a family of sisters called the Poor Clares. Decades ago French monks planted vines in the garden of their monastery of which the sisters made wine over the years. Although there was much commitment in their efforts they had little success to show, until things changed in 2005.

 

The monastery was visited by President Museveni. He offered to sponsor a trip for four sisters to anywhere in the world to increase their winemaking knowledge. They proved to be nuns with an adventurous spirit, surfed the internet and sent off mails in all wind directions. The only reply came from Weltevrede.

 

They arrived during the harvest season of 2006. In a matter of a few weeks a great relationship was formed between them, my family and my cellar team with whom they worked. The sisters were hard working, keen to learn, quick to grasp complicated aspects of microbiology and science and covered everything from terroir to malolactic fermentation. They proved to be diligent students and proceeded to make their own wine on small scale here on Weltevrede.

 

When they left I assisted in exporting 100 vines of Red Muscadel and 400 vines of Shiraz to Uganda which they planted and cared for. The Red Muscadel never grew, but the Shiraz thrived. Their purpose was to make sweet red wine as altar wine. We kept in contact via e-mail to deal with their viticultural and winemaking challenges, which are many in their humid conditions. We had to come up with creative solutions at times.

 

After three years Sister Mary Elizabeth returned with Mother Andrew Kaggwa. Again we were struck by these beautiful people. They have commited their whole lives to Christ and to a simple lifestyle of dedicated silence and prayer. But such joy! And their enthusiasm is contagious.

 

 

With them they brought me a bottle of the first sweet Shiraz made in Uganda. The wine has a deep scarlet colour, plummy ripe fruit flavours and rich sweetness. I was so surprised, oh ye of little faith. Most first small scale winemaking attempts fail. It is normally good fun, but not repeated again as good winemaking isn't that easy. However they succeeded due to their adventurous spirit and dedication. Congratulations to them. They certainly enriched our lives.

 

 

While the sisters were in SA during harvest 2006, they assisted in a venture to make a very special Shiraz here at Weltevrede. Individual bunches of Shiraz were selected by taste in the vineyard,then picked and destemmed berry by berry by hand. These berries were fermented in new open top French oak barrels. After fermentation it was pressed in a small hand press and then poured into new barrels again. After another year it was racked to new barrels again. This wine had 300% new wood treatment and eventually spent more than three years in barrel. The wine was bottled in secret as my father was not to know about it.

 

 

 

My father's 70th birthday was coming up and I had always wanted to make a wine with his name on it. So on his birthday I brought out the Weltevrede Lourens Jonker Shiraz 2006. Only seven Jereboams (3 liter bottles) and 277 Magnums (1,5 liter bottles) were filled.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
  

When I walk into our underground cellar I am amazed at the pioneering spirit of my ancestors since my great grandfather began Weltevrede in 1912. In the early days of winemaking, before stainless steel and cooling they dug into the ground, brought river stones up from the Breede by donkey and cast cement cisterns. These cisterns would annually be rubbed with beeswax which would then be melted with a flame so each hole and crack would be filled to prevent the wine from coming into contact with the raw cement. Since then these cisterns were virtually forgotten.
 
When my father was farming he dug beneath the cellar and opened up some of the old tanks. He used them as a vinoteque to store some of the older vintages.
 
 
In 2005 we dug in further. With jackhammers we knocked at thick old walls for months until we eventually managed to break through and see what was on the other side. The underground tanks were square or rectangular, all different sizes. There was no way of determining beforehand where the various tanks lay as for two generations they had not been in use anymore and four layers of floor covered the original cistern openings. Thus when I began digging and asked my father, “Are there more tanks in this or that direction?” he replied that he did not know as they had been covered up long before he was born. So like Indiana Jones, we mined ever further, discovering as we made our way deeper. What an experience that was! At some points we had to dig through earth to reach another cistern and at last more than 800 square meters of underground cellar was discovered. It is ideal for barrel maturation of our Chardonnay and Shiraz wines and has a good consistent temperature of the Methode Cap Classique aging.
 
 
On request we take visitors to see the underground tunnels, taste our wines there and become a part of that timelessness. When you walk through the tunnels, you experience the feeling of generations ago, “candlelight, silence, spiderwebs,
the dampness and smell of wine aging, oak barrels and burning wicks."

“When all is said and done and we close the chapters on our own lives I think we would all want to look back and say it was life worth living. I made a difference.
Some time ago someone asked me what my dream is and I stopped and wrote down the following: To day by day step into the bullring of everyday life where the adrenaline is pumping and blood flowing, to say and do and live to the utmost full measure of each day. To be filled with enthusiasm, to live inspired, to keep dreaming and to let others dream. To live the freedom to which I am born again.

 
 


But writing down a dream is easy. Living it every day is the challenge. However, writing it down was a good first step, for it made me think and live, consciously looking around me. What a privilege to be born on the African continent. We are blessed with the most spectacular natural splendour around us but also faced with challenges in many people's lives where we have an opportunity to make a difference."
 
 
 
Minding the Gap
There is a gap to be bridged to those who need us. We can quote statistics of crime, like gangsterism, rape, theft, abuse and addiction to alcohol. We can quote statistics of poverty and joblessness, the need for the basics. Some think there is no solution, but we beg to differ. We have seen change and would like to direct all efforts towards this solution.

We believe there is one taproot where all of the above originate and that is a lack of self worth.
 
The Edge of Life Fund is a funding Trust dedicated to the restoration of self worth and dignity through funding successful projects with similar causes. Our priorities are reaching marginalized individuals in rural or forgotten areas, restoring identity, self esteem and rebuilding family structures. We support those projects that care for the individual, for we believe everyone has an Identity, a Value, an Ability, a Name. 

 
Our shared Commitment
We believe most businesses and individuals want to contribute to such a cause. For many years our business realised our social responsibility but without a concrete plan every year ended only with good intentions. Until the Edge of Life Fund was formed. Now Weltevrede Wine Estate started acting by pledging a contribution towards the Edge of Life Fund with every bottle of River’s Edge wine sold locally or internationally.

Projects currently supported by the Edge of Life Fund.

 

Thank You

 

For More information on the Edge of Life Fund, email us

e-mail: philip@weltevrede.com