Coorinja Vineyard | |
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Location | 5989 Toodyay Road, Toodyay WA 6566, Australia |
Coordinates | 31°36′00″S 116°28′34″E / 31.60000°S 116.47611°E |
Wine region | Central Western Australia zone |
Founded | 1889 |
Key people |
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Known for | Shiraz |
Varietals | Chenin blanc, Gordo muscat, Grenache, Shiraz |
Distribution | Local |
Tasting | Open to public |
Coorinja Vineyard or Coorinja Winery is an Australian winery at Coorinja (previously known as Seven Springs), 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) south of Toodyay, Western Australia, in the Central Western Australia wine zone. [1] [2] It was established in 1889 by Harry Fryer Smith, Henry Page Woodward, and John Leslie Sinclair, with 32 planted acres (13 ha) in pinot noir and shiraz. [3] [4] [5] [6] Sinclair left the partnership in 1890. [7] Coorinja Vineyard Company was trademarked in 1893. [8] It is one of the oldest extant vineyards in the state. [9] The name is an Aboriginal word believed to mean "place of the seven springs". [10]
The winery was described as "a fortified haven" by Michael Zekulich, former wine writer for The West Australian. [11] Coorinja produces table and fortified wines including shiraz, grenache, cabernet-shiraz, port, sherry, muscat, liqueur muscat, ginger wine and marsala. [10]
The Coorinja vineyard has been owned by the Wood family since 1919. [12] The family also runs a cropping and sheep operation on the property. [13]
Media related to
Coorinja Vineyard at Wikimedia Commons