Late December in the Adelaide Hills brings a particular kind of pilgrimage to Lenswood, where the hillside blocks of Jauma Farm ripen into one of the region's more soulful cherry harvests. This is certified-organic ground — has been since 2009 — and the orchard's ten varieties of cherries hang heavy across the same 40 acres that also carry Jauma's vines, pears, apples and vegetable beds. The invitation here is refreshingly simple: wander the rows, eat as you go, and fill a container to take home. There's no fuss to it, no manicured queueing system — just fruit, hillside air, and the quiet satisfaction of picking your own.
The season is brief by design, running roughly from late December into early January, so timing a visit means keeping half an eye on the farm's seasonal updates before setting out. What makes the outing worth building a day around is what sits alongside the orchard: Jauma's cellar door, open Saturday afternoons, where the Erskine family — James and Sophie, with son Darcy and a seasonal crew — pour flights of their natural wines, made with zero additions or subtractions, alongside snack plates of farm produce, cheese and homemade sourdough. It's a set-up that rewards lingering, with fireplaces for cooler months and a short stroll down from the car park that turns into its own small ritual.
Jauma's story is one of soil before cellar — James's background in soil chemistry and sommelier work meeting Sophie's instinct for garden and gathering — and the cherry harvest feels like an extension of that philosophy rather than a side attraction. On unceded Peramangk Country, the farm operates as a genuinely small, family-run concern, and the pick-your-own season is one of the clearest ways to meet that ethos face to face: hands in the branches, fruit still warm from the sun, before a glass back at the cellar door.