The Vineyard
Limestone Track is a small vineyard in Central Victoria, developed gradually and with long-term intent.
The work here is deliberate rather than fast. Decisions are made with the land in mind first, and with an understanding that vineyards are built over decades, not seasons. The focus is on suitability, balance, and allowing the site to define its own direction over time.
This is an active, working vineyard, still in development.
The Site
The vineyard sits in Central Victoria, where conditions demand careful variety selection and thoughtful management. Rather than forcing production, the approach has been to work within the limits of the site and adapt as the vineyard evolves.
Progress has been incremental. Blocks have been reassessed, replanted where necessary, and integrated with existing infrastructure rather than replaced wholesale. This has allowed the vineyard to retain continuity while slowly being reshaped.
The Vines
The site consists of a mix of established vines being Chardonnay, Merlot and Tempranillo and newly planted blocks such as Babera and Fiano.
Varieties have been selected based on their suitability to the site and their ability to perform consistently over time in this part of Central Victoria.
Recent plantings form part of a broader effort to rejuvenate sections of the vineyard and reset its long-term structure. These new vines have been integrated alongside existing blocks rather than treated as a separate development.
Current Stage
Limestone Track is now producing wine.
The 2025 vintage marked the first release that reflects the direction of the vineyard. Production remains small by design, with the focus on understanding the site, refining vineyard work, and allowing the wines to develop naturally as the vineyard continues to mature.
Some blocks are established and contributing fruit, while others are newly planted and will take time to come into production. This period remains one of transition, balancing early results with longer-term vineyard development.
Long-Term
The intent is to build a vineyard that can sustain itself over the long term and produce wines that reflect the site rather than a prescribed style.
Progress will continue gradually, guided by observation and adjustment rather than fixed timelines. Larger milestones and changes are documented through the Journal.
More frequent, informal updates are shared via Instagram.