Australia's first apple trees went into the ground here in 1788, when William Bligh planted an orchard at Adventure Bay during a stop on his second breadfruit voyage, and this producer treats that history as a mandate rather than trivia. The inaugural 2014 vintage drew on forty tonnes of fruit from Blinkbonnie Farm, a dormant orchard that had not shipped apples off the island in three decades until it was replanted along biodynamic lines, part of a broader push to revive Bruny's once-thriving apple industry — the Dillon family has been growing fruit on the island since 1922. The cider skips the quick-carbonation shortcut, barrel-fermenting in two-hundred-and-twenty-five-litre oak casks and resting on lees for twelve months before release, a process that trades fizzy simplicity for something closer to a still wine in complexity. The cellar door at Alonnah, on the island's southern half, keeps easy hours — seven days, midday until late — a straightforward stop for anyone travelling through Bruny rather than a booked-ahead pilgrimage, though the cider inside rewards more attention than a passing-through crowd usually gives it.
Australian Atlas 근처
전체 지도에서 보기 →- Bruny Island Premium Wines (브루니 아일랜드 프리미엄 와인)
- Inala Nature Tours
- Hundred Acre Hideaway (헌드레드 에이커 하이드어웨이)
- 43 Degrees Bruny Island (43 디그리스 브루니 아일랜드)
- Bruny Island Secrets Retreat (브루니 아일랜드 시크릿스 리트릿)
- Mewstone Wines (뮤스톤 와인)
- Art Farm Birchs Bay (아트 팜 버치스 베이)
- Bruny Island Experience - Chez Discovery (브루니 아일랜드 익스피어리언스 - 셰즈 디스커버리)