Vineyard: Final Cut
Region: South Australia
Owned by David Roe and Les Lithgow, Final Cut was established to produce high-quality wines expressive of regional character true to their variety. The brand signifies this quality, as well as exceptional value. David Roe is a former owner of Sandalford Wines, a wine producer in Western Australia with vineyards in Margaret River and Swan Valley. Sandalford was established in 1840 by John Septimus Roe, Western Australia’s first Surveyor-General, and remained in the family until the 1980’s. In partnership with long-time associate Les Lithgow, both Roe and Lithgow also have significant interests in the film industry, a fact reflected in the branding of their wine.
The winemaking team is headed by winemakers Rebecca Willson and Geoff Weaver. Their task is to craft traditional, full-bodied, intensely flavored, mouthfilling wines. In 2001, Rebecca was named in the top five Winestate magazine winemakers of the year and The Wine Society’s Young Winemaker of the Year in the same year. In 2003, she was again a finalist in the Young Winemaker of the Year competition and has been awarded a total of 161 medals in her first six years of winemaking. Former chief winemaker for the Hardy group of companies, Geoff is an award-winning winemaker in his own right as well as one of
Australia’s most respected wine show judges. The winery utilizes traditional open top fermenters, made from stainless steel, and a purpose-built barrel cellar for maturation. A combination of premium French and American oak barriques are used to ensure subtle and complementary oak influences. A new state ofthe-
art laboratory is also part of the winery.
Additional Information
| Country | Australia |
|---|---|
| Region |
South AustraliaStraddling the centre of the Australian continent, South Australia is the wine industry’s powerhouse State, producing most of the nation’s wine and boasting some of the oldest individual vines in the world. The venerable old vines found in South Australia’s Barossa Valley and Adelaide Hills, through their isolation, survived the great phylloxera plagues that wiped out the vines of North America and Europe, and somewhat later, devastated |
