What to buy my daughter

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
Post Reply
graham
Posts: 254
Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2003 8:24 pm
Location: Brisbane

What to buy my daughter

Post by graham »

My daughter was born recently and I am wondering what 2005 vintage to put down for her 21st :?:
I currently collect Rockford basket press amounst others but feel they wont go the distance.
Your help will be greatly appreciated by me in 21 years time :twisted:
Nothing is so effective in keeping one young and full of lust as a discriminating palate thoroughly satisfied at least once a day.

User avatar
Wizz
Posts: 1444
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 6:57 am
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Contact:

Post by Wizz »

Hard to tell Graham, perhaps it is too soon to be picking 05s yet - very few wines out yet, let alone seriously ageale ones. I hear the Yarra had a good year, and Wayne Dutschke likes 05 in the Barossa, but no iea on ageability for either yet though,

cheers

Andrew

707
Posts: 1173
Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 1:24 pm
Location: Adelaide, centre of the wine universe

Post by 707 »

Graham, these wines aren't on sale for another two to three years so sit back and relax.

From barrel samples I've seen we're in for a treat and you'll have stacks of wines to choose from including a few Vintage Ports that will go 30-40 years in a canter.

Look forward to you posing the question in 2007/2008.
Cheers - Steve
If you can see through it, it's not worth drinking!

User avatar
DJ
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 12:42 pm
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Post by DJ »

Congratulations I'm in the same category. In the year they arrive Rieslings and Semillons show up - I'm thinking Grossett, O'leary Walker, Mesh, Leonay Riesling and then sum Hunter Semillons (Tyrrells Vat 1 is released to mailing list in year of production). Good reds won't be out for at least a year.

My son was born in 2002 so I'm still buying 02s while starting to plan for 05s. I've bought about half a dozen magnums for the boy and will do the same for my daughter.

Meanwhile if there is any cash available :lol: now is time to up grade the cellar to temperature control so the wines have some chance of going the distance. I've just acquired a Fondis heating/cooling unit so the birth year wines I buy have some chance of surviving 8) Although I had to sell some wine before I was allowed to buy it :roll: :cry:
David J

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake 1Ti 5:23

bacchaebabe
Posts: 1222
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 5:04 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by bacchaebabe »

Hey DJ,

where did you get the fondis unit. I'm looking at upgrading at the moment. Also, does the fondis have to be through a wall or what is the set up exactly?

I have a whisperkool but its not exactly ideal for my situation and would prefer a split system if possible. I know that Fondis have recently released a split system.
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

Guest

Post by Guest »

Thanks for the replies. I too have a fondis DJ. Have had it for 2 years now and it hasn't missed a beat. Magnums were a good idea...overlooked that one.

bacchaebabe....Fondis do make a split unit for seriously big cellars. I posted details on this forum some time last year. If not there i can hunt them up for you.

Graham

User avatar
DJ
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 12:42 pm
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Post by DJ »

Kris

Fondis is available from Laurie Bilsborough at Cellarwine (02) 9948 6347.

I presume you have seen the Fondis website: http://www.fondis.com/dn_winemaster_air_conditioners/

I would guess the split system must be very new as I didn't notice it 2 months ago when last looking at the site. As I read it Fondis' split system is for a very big cellar 100 m3 but as you will see there are two other systems.

If you contact Laurie tell him David Jordan referred you - perhaps next time I buy some gear from him he will give me a discount :wink:

David
David J

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake 1Ti 5:23

bacchaebabe
Posts: 1222
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 5:04 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by bacchaebabe »

Thanks Guys - cellar not seriously big - more 4 x 4 metres - but interested in the split system due to lack of external walls. Well I have external walls but they are largely underground with just a vent through to the surface. A split system would work well.
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

Baby Chickpea
Posts: 582
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 12:17 pm

Post by Baby Chickpea »

I too have the Fondis IN50 (for 50 m3) at http://www.fondis.com/dn_wine_in50_en/ bought from Laurie 3.5 years ago. Not one problem and holds 13C to perfection with perfect humidiuty of 60-75%. Even on 35C days in Sydney summer, it handles 13C with ease. In peak summer period, one 10L bucket of water is emptied out once a week. In winter, like now, no bucket emptying for last 3 months. If i'd set it up again would have had water tubes running outside so water deposits there instead of inside cellar in bucket. Highly recommended and far superior to my previous WhisperKool which was a problem from day one and struggled at low temperatures. The Fondis ain't cheap but very quite and smooth. Can also go as low as 8C! You can get the IN18 (18 m3) for smaller cellar sizes.
Danny

The voyage of discovery lies not in finding new landscapes but in having new eyes. We must never be afraid to go too far, for success lies just beyond - Marcel Proust

User avatar
DJ
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 12:42 pm
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Post by DJ »

bacchaebabe wrote:Thanks Guys - cellar not seriously big - more 4 x 4 metres - but interested in the split system due to lack of external walls. Well I have external walls but they are largely underground with just a vent through to the surface. A split system would work well.


Kris

You are probably aware but just for clarification, The built in system Fondis are not suitable for an external wall but have to be vented to an inside area.

David
David J

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake 1Ti 5:23

bacchaebabe
Posts: 1222
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 5:04 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by bacchaebabe »

Interesting stuff guys - thanks again. The whisperkool I have is the built in type so I've had to use my imagination to set it up, with the hot air venting outside but the intake being from within the cellar.

The main problem is the water in summer. At peak times (january) it can be two buckets a day so I have to empty in the morning and at night - great for the garden with the water restrictions but a pain in the butt - especially if we go away - have to bring the garbage bin in! It would work MUCH better if it was just through the wall like it's supposed to be.

Anyway, will give Laurie a ring and see what he thinks. And find out how much these beasties cost. Anyone need a whisperkool?
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

hysterical1144
Posts: 4
Joined: Sat Jul 02, 2005 4:57 pm

Post by hysterical1144 »

Hi DJ

Care to share which 02 wine are you cellaring for your boy ?

Thank you

DJ wrote:Congratulations I'm in the same category. In the year they arrive Rieslings and Semillons show up - I'm thinking Grossett, O'leary Walker, Mesh, Leonay Riesling and then sum Hunter Semillons (Tyrrells Vat 1 is released to mailing list in year of production). Good reds won't be out for at least a year.

My son was born in 2002 so I'm still buying 02s while starting to plan for 05s. I've bought about half a dozen magnums for the boy and will do the same for my daughter.

Meanwhile if there is any cash available :lol: now is time to up grade the cellar to temperature control so the wines have some chance of going the distance. I've just acquired a Fondis heating/cooling unit so the birth year wines I buy have some chance of surviving 8) Although I had to sell some wine before I was allowed to buy it :roll: :cry:

707
Posts: 1173
Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 1:24 pm
Location: Adelaide, centre of the wine universe

Post by 707 »

Kris, let us know rough costs on these units. I'm always getting people asking me for recommendations so it would be nice to point them in the right direction.

Thanks in advance
Cheers - Steve
If you can see through it, it's not worth drinking!

User avatar
DJ
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 12:42 pm
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Post by DJ »

Steve / Kris

I've had my Fondis for about a month so the price is fairly current The 18S (with heater) was about $3000 and the 18 about $200 less.

hysterical1144

What have 02's am I cellaring for the boy? Well I guess part of the answer is it depends what I don't drink before he gets a chance to help me. The magnums will definitely be kept - so far I have Turkey Flat Shiraz and Cab Sav, Clonakilla Shiraz Viogner and a couple of one off specials, I'm hoping to add a few more depending on what I spot.

I have more 02 in my cellar than anything else partly because it is the first good year released while I have been earning more than student wages (ridiculous really - started cellaring in 1990 - proper job 2002, oh well that's what happens if you have to get a PhD out of the system).
Off the top of my head I have bought from 2002 - typically 6 bottles or less of each:
St Peter's
Bin 28 Kalimna
Bin 389
Turkey Flat C/S & Shiraz
Rockford BP Shiraz & C/S
D'arenberg Dead arm, d'arrys original, footbolt
Tyrrells vat 9
Noon Eclipse, shiraz, C/S
Dalwhinne Shiraz & C/S
Summerfield Shiraz & C/S
Coriole Shiraz & Llyod
Mt Ida
Mamre Brook C/S & Shiraz
Marius Shiraz
Noble 1
Grossett watervale & polish Hill
Mesh
Richmond Grove Watervale

Still planning to buy when released St Henri and Vintage ports
things like footbolt and mamre brook are really for drinking in 5 to 10 years not 15+. It has been a bit scatter gun in approach aiming for a few things to go the distance.
David J

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake 1Ti 5:23

707
Posts: 1173
Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 1:24 pm
Location: Adelaide, centre of the wine universe

Post by 707 »

That's a good start and alot of hard to get stuff too. I'd be confident a whole heap of them will live the distance if well cellared.

VPs, I let you know what I find as they appear as they're likely to be CD specials as a rule being tiny production jobs. Rockford will certainly have a 2002 released in about four years.
Cheers - Steve
If you can see through it, it's not worth drinking!

peterk
Posts: 56
Joined: Sat Aug 16, 2003 6:15 pm
Location: Brisbane

Re: What to buy my daughter

Post by peterk »

graham wrote:My daughter was born recently and I am wondering what 2005 vintage to put down for her 21st :?:
I currently collect Rockford basket press amounst others but feel they wont go the distance.
Your help will be greatly appreciated by me in 21 years time :twisted:


Hi Graham
As pointed out you still have plenty of time to see what the 05 vintage is going to be like. But large format bottles are the go,Grange historically will go the distance. I would look at Tahbilk, and V.Ps some examples are Liebichwine,Pfeiffer,Stanton and Killeen, Seppelts, I dont know if 05 is a declared year in portugal but there ports will last 21 years+ and drink well.Hope this helps.

Peter.

bacchaebabe
Posts: 1222
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 5:04 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by bacchaebabe »

All houses declared in 2003 so if anyone has any kids born then, you could certainly do worse. I've just ordered a six pack of Fonseca en primeur and its happening now if you want to get on that band wagon. English web sites are the go.
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

Post Reply