2012年1月29日星期日

Blue sky thinking

Across the Tasman,See the top leatherhandbags from the best brands in the industry. even Sydney and Melbourne have had more rain than these traditionally sunny cities are used to.

If there's one place you can rely on for good weather, according to almost everyone I meet while there, it's Western Australia's Margaret River region.

Situated amidst the rolling hills of the Leeuwin-Naturaliste Ridge, between Cape Naturaliste and Cape Leeuwin, with the mighty Indian Ocean to the west, Margaret River boasts sunshine, blue skies, temperatures in the 30s, gentle sea breezes, no humidity and modest rainfall between October and April.

Kiwis: imagine, if you will, getting up in the morning and deciding what to wear, knowing it will be appropriate all day.Our sexylingerie look, work and feel exactly like the originals, No need to pack an umbrella in your already bulging handbag. No use for the jacket under your arm.

Consistency - it's a word seldom heard in New Zealand's weather vocabulary. In Margaret River, it comes as standard.

There's another benefit to this constant climate. Like California's Napa Valley and France's Bordeaux, Margaret River is blessed with the perfect conditions to grow great grapes.

The region produces only 3 per cent of Australia's total grape yield, but about 20 per cent of its premium wines. The first winery in the region was Vasse Felix in 1967. Now, there are about 110 producers in Margaret River, many of them showcasing local goods in fantastic restaurants.

Sunshine, surf, top-quality wines, gourmet foods and talented chefs - Margaret River is pretty much paradise.

With so much variety in the region, the best way to sample it all is with a tour. Self- drive is an option, but then you would have to fight it out with your travelling companions over who gets the unenviable role of sober driver.

What a waste it would be to pass up Margaret River's wines. Many operators offer minivan wine tours, but the idea of visiting multiple cellar doors and downing as much as you can in over half a day doesn't appeal to everyone.

There is an alternative. Sean Blocksidge, owner operator of The Margaret River Discovery Co, describes his itineraries as "the tour for people who don't do tours". In his Land Rover Discovery 4WD, Blocksidge will take a maximum of six guests on his gourmet eco trips, which include a "best of the best" wine tour, sunset canoe tour and private itineraries tailored to specific needs.You can find all the guccihandbags you need here.

I'm taking the Margaret River Discovery Tour with a pick-up from the visitors centre in Margaret River's township.

It's not long before we're in our comfortable seats and on the road, and it's not long after that when Sean swings off-road onto a dirt track through the Leeuwin- Naturaliste National Park, down to a calm, quiet spot on the banks of Margaret River itself.

We're setting out for a short canoe trip and after a quick safety talk and steering instructions, we're off. We divide between two canoes,I had to say that the news of goodchloehandbags promotion. and gently paddle our way along the still, khaki-green waters of the river.

It's so peaceful - the only other people around are a dad and his children enjoying splashing into the water from a rope swing attached to one of the towering jarrah trees, and three young boys, who proudly show off their catch of still wriggling marron, a West Australian species of crayfish. What a way to spend your summer holidays, I think, and I feel even sorrier for all those Kiwi families who spent the start of summer cowering under sodden canvas.

After about an hour on the river, we pile back into the 4WD and Sean drives back into town, stopping at the delectable cafe and delicatessen, Blue Ginger Fine Foods, for lunch supplies.

While he fills up his "esky", I take a look at the huge range of gourmet local and imported products and can't help but buy some to take home.

We drive through the small beachside town of Prevelly, passing areas badly affected by November's bush fires. Although the damage was terrible, no-one was hurt, thanks to forced evacuations, a lesson learnt after Victoria's 2009 Black Saturday fires, which killed 173 people.

Although the perception, even across Australia, is that much of Margaret River was wiped out in the recent fires, Sean points out that only 1 per cent of the region was affected. The sight of burnt scrub and blackened trees is still sobering.

The thoughtful mood continues when Sean takes us to a waterhole believed to have been home to indigenous communities more than 30,000 years ago.

He says some groups find the spot overwhelmingly spiritual, while others don't understand the significance. To try to make the waterhole's history hit home, he gets out a plastic container full of 20-cent coins. Taking one coin out of the box, he likens it to the last 200 years. Pointing at the still full box, he says "this represents the last 30,000 years".

It's an innovative way to put Australia's vast Aboriginal history into perspective and something I have thought about many times since.

Another special moment comes with lunch. Punching a security code into the entry box at the imposing gates of Fraser Gallop Estate, Sean travels up the winery's long driveway and sets up lunch in the air-conditioned cool of the barrel room.

This winery has no cellar door and is normally not open to the public, but Sean, who worked in the wine industry, has connections.

The goodies he bought from Blue Ginger are all delicious - olives, pates, meats, bread, cheese and dips - and are washed down nicely with some samples of Fraser Gallop's award-winning wines, including one yet to be released to the market.

The estate's winemaker, Clive Otto, was born in Tanzania but grew up in Auckland. Despite calling Margaret River home, he says he's a Kiwi "through and through".

His first winery job was at Gisborne's Matawhero. He worked the 2006 vintage at Central Otago's Amisfield, but most of his winemaking years have been in the Margaret River, where, he says, he moved for the surf and laid-back lifestyle.

Otto's trophy haul includes 134 gold medals, 160 silvers and 302 bronzes, plus 70 trophies at local, national and international events.

He was Winestate Magazine's 2005 Australian Winemaker of the Year and Fraser Gallop's 2007 Cabernet Sauvignon - Otto's first hands-on vintage for the estate - won the best Bordeaux blend over [PndStlg]10 trophy at the Decanter World Wine Awards in London, beating wines from South Africa, Chile, New Zealand and Bordeaux, but you would never know any of this from talking to Otto.

"That was just a bit of luck," he says.christiandiorreplicahandbags is proudly powered by WordPress and WPMU Theme pack. "It was just good timing."

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