Wine Producing Regions - Currency Creek
You can click the dots on the map or alternatively click the licks on the left to find out more information about that region of South Australia.
- Overview
- Adelaide Hills
- Adelaide Plains
- Barossa Valley
- Clare Valley
- Coonawarra
- Currency Creek
- Eden Valley
- Kangaroo Island
- Langhome Creek
- McLaren Vale
- Mount Benson
- Padthaway
- Riverland
- Southern Fleurieu
- Southern Flinders
- Wrattonbully
Currency Creek, South Australia
Captain Charles Sturt first explored this region when he travelled down the Murray River in 1829 and 1830 and made his last campsite near the present town of Goolwa. In 1837 the town of Currency Creek and Hindmarsh Island were officially named, and in 1840 an elaborate town plan for Currency Creek was laid out.
Over the next 50 years agriculture, river transport and recreation developed. It was not until 1969 that the first vines were planted by Wally and Rosemary Tonkin; one acre each of Riesling, Grenache, Shiraz and Cabernet Sauvignon. Despite local cynicism, the vines flourished and the first vintage followed in 1972 for what was then called Santa Rosa Winery, now known as Currency Creek Winery. In that same year the first vines were planted on 2.6 hectares, (6.5 acres) at what today is the Middleton Winery. They, too, were successful.
These plantings were on the dominant rolling sandy slopes that allow easy infiltration of water into the overlaying friable cracking clays that are easily accessed by the roots of the vines. The other suitable soils are loams with red alkaline clayey subsoils.
The climate in the region is slightly warmer than that of Langhorne Creek and on a par with that of Margaret River and California's Carneros. In common with those regions, it is a strongly maritime climate due to Lake Alexandrina and the Southern Ocean, thus avoiding extremes of cold or heat. There has been only one September day of frost experienced in the past 37 years and no hail or fog. Excellent ground water is readily accessible through bores, and there are no restrictions on its use.
Wine Notes
Sauvignon Blanc
This was one of the wines to bring attention to Currency Creek in the early days, courtesy of the Tonkin family and Petaluma, which handled these grapes. The wines have great delicacy and freshness with greater varietal definition than with other similar wine.
Cabernet Sauvignon
A variety ideally suited to the temperate, mild climate of the region, this Cabernet Sauvignon produces complete and rounded wines with clear varietal definition. As the ripening curve increases, the flavours move from coffee to blackberry and on to black currant at optimum ripeness. The style has more similarity with that of Coonawarra than to others with which it may be compared.
Merlot
Although not widely planted, Merlot performs very well with good perfume and varietal character and provides a synergistic blend with Cabernet Sauvignon. There is also potential as a varietal wine in its own right.
Shiraz
This wine has a fragrance, an elevated aroma that precedes its medium bodied, low tannin and Rhone Valley-like spicy fruit flavour that greets the palate with elegance and finesse. It is arguable that in a normal vintage the area is a fraction too cool for this variety to show its best.




