Two Paddocks The Last Chance

Two Paddocks The Last Chance bottle image

Wine Description

“We grow our premium Two Paddocks Pinot Noir entirely on our four small vineyards in Central Otago. In some exceptional vintages, listening carefully, we realize that one of these sites may have something extraordinary to say in its own right. It is only then that we will make one of these very rare single vineyard wines.” Sam Neill, Proprietor

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Acclaim
“This is on a prime trajectory, following on from the last two, excellent vintages. This ripe 2018 has such composure and polish. Spicy red and dark cherries and crushed red flowers, spices and attractively sappy notes here, leading to a seamless palate that offers layers of pastry-fine tannin and succulent, rich fruit. Very vibrant red cherries hold so long and fresh. From organically grown grapes.” (#29)
— Nick Stock, Dec 2019
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Vineyard & Production Info
Vineyard name
The Last Chance
Soil composition
Raw schist gravels
Training method
VSP
Vines/acre:
6 acres
Exposure:
Northern
Year vineyard planted:
1998
Bottles produced of this wine:
2658
Certified Eco-Friendly Practices:
Made from organically certified grapes
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Winemaking & Aging
Varietal composition:
100% Pinot Noir
Type of aging container:
Barriques
Type of oak:
French
Length of aging before bottling:
11 months
Age of Aging Container:
25% New
Total SO2
63
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Analytical Data
Dry extract:
27.4 g/L
Total SO2
63
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Wine Production

Hand picked and sorted in the vineyard. One-third whole-bunch fermentation in a 3.5 ton wooden cuve. 5 day cold soak. No commercial yeast added, ferment temperature peaked at 32° – post fermentation transferred to medium and light toast French barriques for 11 months maturation. 25% new wood and the balance in second and third fill barrels. Light filtration prior to bottling.

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About the Vineyard

The Last Chance is a beautifully sited two-hectare terrace perched in bright clear air above the Earnscleugh Valley, carefully planted with well-tended Burgundian clone pinot noir. It nestles amongst a small cluster of the World’s most southerly vineyards and takes its name from the watercourse that runs through its heart, hand dug by gold miners in the 1860s, The Last Chance.