{"api":{"host":"https:\/\/pinot.decanter.com","authorization":"Bearer NjUxMzQ2ODk3NWYwOTJiMTc5NjVhNDFlYWFkNGI1Mzc4NDE5ZWIwNmJkOTQxYzIwMDEyNWFjMzhhMjM2NWZhYw","version":"2.0"},"piano":{"sandbox":"false","aid":"6qv8OniKQO","rid":"RJXC8OC","offerId":"OFPHMJWYB8UK","offerTemplateId":"OFPHMJWYB8UK","wcTemplateId":"OTOW5EUWVZ4B"}}

PREMIUM

Younger generations: The fresh faces taking charge at family wineries

In wine, it’s never a given that the younger generation will take the reins from their parents. Or that it will run smoothly if they do. The 10 success stories in this series give an insight into some of the common challenges faced along the way. First up, changes in Côte-Rôtie and South Australia.

How would you like to work with your mum and dad? And then take over after they’ve stepped back? Five minutes spent thinking about this prospect will reveal, I suspect, the shock of the challenge. (I loved my mum and dad – but I’d have flunked.)

Not many of us, though, are born into small family businesses, where every nuance of our parents’ working lives provides the backdrop to our childhood. Fewer still into farming businesses, rooted in land, place, origin, a local culture, a partnership with the environment.

Fewer yet again into a farming business where the primary crop is not only grown but transformed, crafted, aged, packaged and sold, sometimes to a global marketplace. The life of a wine-grower is the life less ordinary. Imagine yourself into that life and you can see why the pull might be strong.

You’ll have watched the struggles of your parents and grandparents; you’ll know the intimacies of ownership, for better and worse. The domaine, the quinta or the tenuta isn’t just a business; it’s more like an eternal child, continually growing into something new, and requiring constant love and care to ensure that this process is successful.

The decision about what you do with your life is marbled with responsibility: can you really walk away from that child? Hence the fascination of the stories in the profiles that follow.


Next instalment: Chiara de Iulis Pepe & Christine Kistler


Wines from a new generation:


Related content

Meet the next generation at four legacy Napa wineries

From Pauillac to Stellenbosch: Celebrating May-Eliane de Lencquesaing at 100

Champagne Dhondt-Grellet: The young grower at the top of his game

Latest Wine News