Swinney Farvie 2024s

“Something Truly Special” [Halliday]
Swinney Farvie 2024s

Given this grower’s history, it should come as no surprise that Swinney has crafted another stellar set of 2024 Farvie wines. Twenty-twenty-four was one of the warmest, driest years on record, a season where Swinney’s meticulous farming methods proved more critical than ever. Rob Mann explained that while Swinney picked a little earlier than normal, the fruit was pristine, ripe and fresh, with the kind of focus and sparkle that suggests a cooler year. “We’re in a cooler part of WA, and the Rhône reds, particularly the bush-vine Grenache and Mourvèdre, simply love a warm season,” says Mann. 

 

In the cellar, Mann worked with a high percentage of whole bunches, which he finds heightens freshness and brings aromatic breadth. However, he lays the real success of the vintage directly at the door of Swinney’s ironstone-rich soils and exhaustive viticulture, which results in elevated natural acidity. (Perhaps surprisingly, the 2024 wines came in with lower pHs than the previous year.) Then, the continentality of the Frankland River—which ensures cool nights—plays a key role in developing the flavour and freshness of the finished wines. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. 

 

“These top-tier wines … have re-shaped the Australian wine landscape.” Nick Ryan, The Weekend Australian 

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Swinney Farvie Grenache 2024
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Swinney Farvie Grenache 2024

Take a walk through Swinney’s untrellised Grenache bush vines, and things change about halfway down the block, planted in 2004 on the Estate’s upper northeast-facing hillside crest. The gravel gets deeper, and there is less clay. “That’s Farvie,” says Rob Mann. Here, the fruit is different, too; it is more ferrous and mineral with fine, velvety tannins and so much complexity. Vines are picked over multiple passes, with only the best bunches from each—those sitting in the dappled light of the vine’s architecture—set aside for Farvie.

Building on this meticulous vineyard selection, the 2024 Farvie Grenache was handpicked on March 1st from established, dry-grown bush vines on the gravelly loam soils of Swinney’s Wilson’s Pool Vineyard. Fruit thinning and selective hand harvesting over multiple passes ensured fruit was picked at optimal ripeness. Sorted by hand, Rob Mann incorporated roughly 60% bunches this year, and the wine spent 10 days on skins before aging for 11 months in fine-grained, large-format French oak. 13.9% alcohol.


Swinney Farvie Grenache 2024
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Swinney Riesling 2025
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Swinney Riesling 2025

2025 saw another warm and dry year which, alongside well-maintained vine vigour and good vine health, allowed the Swinney team to harvest 1-2 weeks earlier than avaerage. The fruit was pristine and intensely concentrated: a winemakers dream.

The first key to understanding Swinney’s Riesling style is to appreciate the farming. All blocks are organic and dry-farmed, the vines are cane-pruned and the row orientation is north to south. The team uses shade cloth in the Riesling blocks, protecting the bunches from excessive sun exposure and avoiding any roasted character in the fruit. Such precise vineyard management goes some way to explaining the wine’s purity and transparency.

The second key is in the cellar, where Rob Manns’s search for structure and texture reigns supreme. The fruit (from two of Swinney’s oldest blocks in the Powderbark vineyard) is whole bunch-pressed and fermented with indigenous yeast in stainless steel with a high component of solids. This approach “builds nuance and a saline core in the wine”, according to Mann. He’s not looking for austerity, rather he is seeking something more textural and aromatic with flavour complexity and a high degree of fruit purity.

Swinney Riesling 2025
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Swinney Mourvedre Rosé 2025
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Swinney Mourvedre Rosé 2025

Built from the ground up, Swinney’s rosé is made from meticulously tended vines, explicitly managed to create this wine—as is the case for the top rosé producers of Southern France. Mourvèdre calls the shots in the 2024 rosé to the tune of 86% of the blend. Vermentino plays a key cameo to bring racy freshness, while Grenache adds a dash of cherry-fruited flesh. 

Most of the fruit is drawn from dry-grown bush vines on Powderbark Vineyard’s ironstone gravel hilltop. With a focus on freshness, the fruit from these vines was picked on the cusp of full maturity. The Mourvèdre was then pressed as bunches using a traditional, ultra-light Champagne cycle along with a small percentage of Vermentino for its freshening acid streak and a splash of flesh-giving Cinsault. The juice was run directly to seasoned French oak barriques and fermented with indigenous yeasts. 

Grown and made with no concessions—that is, with the same level of detail that goes into each of this grower’s wines—it’s beautifully perfumed, with a creamy texture and tight grip, backed by substance and structure.

Swinney Mourvedre Rosé 2025
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Swinney Grenache 2024
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Swinney Grenache 2024

Matt Swinney’s affection for the Southern Rhône and Priorat led him to plant bush-vine Grenache on Swinney’s ironstone hilltops in the 1990s. Grenache was hardly known in the area at the time, and there were many raised eyebrows in the region when the news got out. Matt’s hunch has since proved correct, and Swinney is now setting a new standard for Australian Grenache. Erin Larkin does not overstate the significance of Swinney’s wine, writing, “the Grenache, particularly, is a tremendously important wine not only in the context of this vineyard but of the Great Southern Region and, indeed, on a national level, for Australia.” Meanwhile, Max Allen has noted that, “the [Swinney] grenache, in particular, tastes like no other Australian example of this variety and will change perceptions of the Frankland region...”

Each year, the Swinney Grenache is picked by hand from the well-established, dry-grown bush vines on the Wilsons Pool vineyard’s rich gravel/loam soils. Each vine was passed over multiple times to harvest only perfectly ripe fruit. The bunches were then destemmed and sorted berry by berry. This year, Rob Mann worked with 40% bunches—bolstering the structural frame to balance the intensely aromatic, flavourful fruit—in a combination of small wooden fermenters and stainless-steel tanks. The wine spent two weeks on skins before being pressed to large (3600-litre), seasoned French wood for 11 months’ maturation. Sitting pretty in the red-fruited spectrum, Mann notes that the warmer conditions of 2024 were ideal for the Grenache, which, despite the conditions, recorded higher acidity than in any preceding vintage. That freshness has brought bags of clarity and energy to another unflinching Swinney Grenache.

Swinney Grenache 2024
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Swinney Mourvèdre 2024
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Swinney Mourvèdre 2024

Echoing what has been said many times about Swinney’s Grenache, it is rare to find a Mourvèdre of this purity and distinction from Australian shores. This is Swinney’s fourth straight Mourvèdre bottling, and the wine is basking in the spotlight. The Mourvèdre is drawn from dry-grown bush vines on Wilsons Pool Vineyard, planted in the early 2000s on rich, gravelly-loam soils. The fruit was picked by hand when flavour and tannin were perfectly ripe, then sorted berry by berry and transferred via gravity to a single stainless-steel fermenter. It fermented with 18% whole bunches to highlight the variety’s “distinctive ferrous qualities, fine structure and wild spice.” The new vintage spent 11 days on skins before being pressed to fine-grained large-format French oak, where it matured for 11 months. Speaking to the sheer, visceral originality of this wine, Mann says that “there’s something of Swinney here that no one can replicate.” Enigmatic, maybe, but also very true.


Swinney Mourvèdre 2024
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Swinney Syrah 2024
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Swinney Syrah 2024

That Swinney’s Syrah has been described by one writer as “more Hermitage than Grange” gives you a clue where the style and quality level is pitched. Already a WA benchmark, the Syrah is hand-harvested from select parcels in the Wilsons Pool vineyard and from 30-year-old vines in the Powderbark vineyard. Unlike the Grenache and Mourvèdre, the Syrah is trellised—although there are plans afoot for some single-stake Syrah. The sites are planted to various clones, including 470, Waldron and Jack Mann’s heritage mass-selection Syrah. Each clone gives a different bunch structure. Combined with the Estate’s use of shade cloth to shield the fruit from the harsh afternoon rays, this helps build layers of structural complexity in the final wine. The cloth also creates soft, mottled light, lowers the temperature in the bunch zone, and preserves freshness, spice and typicity (varietal and regional) in the fruit.

As always, the quality is in the details: berries were hand-sorted into small wooden and stainless-steel fermenters via gravity, and the wine includes 22% whole bunches to maintain freshness while providing a robust frame for the lustrous fruit. The 2024 spent 11 days on skins before being pressed directly to 600-litre fine-grained demi-muids. The Shiraz is the only wine to see any new oak, and just 8% in this vintage. The fruit intensity here is beautifully measured by long, sinewy tannins and compelling energy. “We’re not afraid of having some structure in the wines,” say Mann. “We make wines with spine. They should make you hungry.”


Swinney Syrah 2024
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