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Days of Wine and Roses
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Summer in South Africa's Winelands
Lush green vines drape the rollicking hills and
concertinaed mountains swirl against the sky. Farm dams glint
in the summer sun and whitewashed walls flicker behind
homestead-planted trees. Every couple of metres, distinctive
brown signs with wine barrels indicate yet another wine farm
open for tastings - 84 to be precise, on the Stellenbosch Wine
Route, the heart of South Africa's wine industry.
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This is but one of a number of wine routes
that extend from Cape Town itself through the many valleys of
fruit and flowers that carpet the mountainous Western Cape.
Although Cape Town is a mere 45 minutes away, an extended stay
is required in order to explore the fine food and wine, the
scenery and history of the Cape Winelands. Sleep-over options
include 19th Century manor houses, working wine estates
evocative of the past and the oldest inn in the country.
Today South Africa is the world's 10th largest wine producer
and according to Maureen Thomson, spokesperson for another of
the Cape's major attractions, the V&A Waterfront, "Wine is
considered the third most commanding reason that international
tourists visit South Africa, after Cape Town itself and the
country's wildlife." For the past 5 years, the wine industry
has been growing in South Africa at a rate of 20% a year.
Tourism is keeping up the pace and the combination is proving
enticing, especially to visitors from the UK whom surveys show
are Cape Town's biggest fans. |
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The harvest begins, by hand, at the end of
January after the winemaker has decided that the grapes are
optimum. Harvest season runs from February to April and is the
best time to see the wineries in action. Along the ox-wagon
wide streets of Stellenbosch, tractors are a common sight at
harvest time, pulling open trailers heaped with grapes. The
wineries offer cellar and vineyard tours in addition to their
wine-tastings as well as fine and al fresco dining in
surroundings far removed from the urban frenzy of the modern
world. |
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The vineyards wear a look of summer
sleekness, their elegant farmhouses reminiscent of an earlier,
more gracious age. The low-slung homesteads with their gabled
facades, whitewashed and often thatched are ubiquitous
throughout the Western Cape. The homesteads have been restored
to a glory that was absent in their first incarnations as the
modest, hand-hewn homes of the early settlers. As grapes
replaced grain and the farms prospered, so the original
structure was added onto and separate dwellings were built to
house the eldest sons.
The farmers' cosmopolitan origins informed their architecture
and medieval Holland, Huguenot France and later the islands of
Indonesia contributed to a style of building that has become
known as Cape Dutch. |
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With the gable came the grape. Wine was
introduced to the southern tip of Africa through the
enthusiastic exertions of a Dutchman by the name of Jan van
Riebeeck. He was charged by the Dutch East India Company to
set up a way-station at Table Bay for the provisioning of its
trading ships. Upon his arrival at the Cape of Good Hope in
1652, Jan van Riebeeck soon realised that the wet winters and
dry summers of his new home were akin to the Mediterranean
grape-growing regions of Europe. |
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Van Riebeeck asked the Dutch East India
Company to send him vine cuttings and with them he began a 300
year old wine industry. Jan tapped into the first Cape wine
barrel seven years after landfall. A triumphant van Riebeeck
recorded in his diary - "Praise the Lord, today the first wine
was pressed from Cape grapes, 2 February 1659." |
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By 1679, Simon van der Stel was the
Company's representative at the Cape. An unassuming man, who
bequeathed his name to several urban and geographical
landmarks in the region, van der Stel had been looking for a
place to settle wheat and wine farmers. He determined that the
fertile land that bounded the Eerste (First) River would be
the site of the second settlement at the Cape. Free burghers
were ceded land on the understanding that 10% of their crop
went back to the Company. He named the fledgling town
Stellenbosch in 1687. |
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The following year, van der Stel invited
French Protestants fleeing Catholic persecution to the Cape
where he settled them in the outlying areas of Franschhoek and
Paarl. The French influence is today apparent in the names of
the estates and the fine wines they produce. Initially 8
families were settled and then in 1692 a large grant of land
was distributed to 40 families.
Many of the wine farms visited on the Stellenbosch wine route
today are these early bequests to pioneering farmers. |
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Neetlingshof Estate was one such farm,
although its first vintage was produced over a century later,
in 1804. The elegant gabled manor house which today houses the
Lord Neetling Restaurant was built a decade later by the
French Huguenot, Charl Marais. The farm lies in the valley
between the Helderberg mountains and the sea. Winds from False
Bay cool the vines, "making it the little blue chip in
viticulture that it is," as Chief Public Relations Officer,
Katinka van Niekerk puts it.
The Estate was named Wine Producer of the year for 2002/3 at
the International Wine and Spirit Competition, because of its
high-scoring Pinotage and Cabernet Franc. My favourite,
however, was the 1998 Shiraz with its firm wood and smoky
smoothness. |
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Another original van der Stel concession,
Spier is not just another wine farm. Aptly describing itself
as a "Lifestyle Experience," this luxury hotel boasts five
restaurants, an open-air amphitheatre for theatrical
performances, a wine centre with over 200 of the region's
wines on sale, an equestrian centre, an 18 hole golf course,
wildlife encounters and a vintage train with renovated
carriages dating back to the 1950's that transport the visitor
from Cape Town to the many unexpected pleasures of Spier. |
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There is more to Spier, however, than at
first meets the eye. The farm was bought by a South African
businessman in 1993. Dick Enthoven had left the country
because of apartheid and returned under the new dispensation
determined to make a contribution to the new South Africa. As
Spier's marketing manager, Stephen Laivaux, explained: ""It's
important for the country that a business like this has a
positive impact on the people that live around it." Thus the
farm labourers have been ceded land on which they practice
organic farming methods, a new school has been built for the
farm children and skills development is actively practised.
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Ecological best practices go hand in hand
with the concept of "responsible spending" at Spier. The farm
workers enjoy ecologically designed housing developments. The
guests bathe, unbeknown to them, in water heated by solar
power, and stroll through indigenous gardens which attract an
abundance of birds, including fish eagles which haven't been
seen on the farm for years. |
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The sun's last rays glint off the vines,
highlighting the peaks of Stellenbosch's Jonkershoek valley. A
cool wind rustles the oak leaves as the mountains turn russet,
magenta then plum as the sun dips lower. At the far end of
emerald lawns, a long white façade with impressive gable and
two leopard statues guard the entrance to the 5 star, Lanzerac
Manor. The effect is only somewhat marred by the signs warning
guests not to walk on the grass.
Guests' rooms with private patios are set across from the
vineyards, which lie beyond a border of blue agapanthus.
Inside the lacquered, fretted doors of the cupboard is a
bottle of odourless insect killer and a note from management.
"Dear Guest, …we are situated on a working wine estate and
therefore subject to insects of nature…should you require
assistance from housekeeping please contact reception." I'm
happy to say that I managed to expel an invading cricket
without having to resort to reinforcements. A red tractor
trundles through the early morning vines outside my door. |
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