Oldenburg Vineyards Views January 2026: Where nature leads

Monday, 2 February, 2026
Oldenburg Vineyards
January finds Oldenburg Vineyards already in full swing.

Where nature leads

While the turn of the year naturally invites a look back at 2025’s highlights, the vineyards at Oldenburg Vineyards are asking different questions. Veraison began in late December, earlier than in previous vintages, and progressed quickly. The first parcels of golden Chardonnay grapes were harvested by mid-January. This is the moment everything comes together: the quiet work in the soil, the careful decisions for each vine, and the patience of past seasons made tangible in the fruit.

Transitioning from 2025 to 2026, we feel a renewed sense of purpose in how we farm and think about Rondekop. Our commitment to regenerative viticulture continues to deepen. With each season, nature plays a more visible role on the farm. The more we trust these natural processes, the more confident we become. Oldenburg’s wines will express their intrinsic character when the fundamentals are right and the vineyards are given time to speak clearly. It is a relationship that feels less like management and more like a long conversation with this place.

This harvest carries a particular energy because several young Chardonnay blocks are being harvested for the first time. These parcels, planted on cooler, carefully chosen slopes and farmed regeneratively from their first day, are now beginning to reveal their character. In the vineyard, Christo moves between the rows with his refractometer – measuring sugar, weighing berries, and listening to what the vines tell him. Then comes the most important test of all: tasting the grapes with Nic, and together they formulate their thoughts on ripeness and picking times.

With select young blocks in production, our precision viticulture must be spot-on. Young vines can outpace their developing leaves, producing more grapes than the vine can ripen. The vineyard team knows this and focuses on balance. Green harvesting is crucial. By removing a portion of the bunches, the team helps the remaining fruit ripen evenly. This is more demanding than it sounds. Christo often encourages the team to drop more fruit than they find comfortable; no one enjoys seeing healthy bunches on the soil. Yet this discipline is vital for the future. Every cluster left on the vine has a purpose, guided by the canopy and its ripening potential. Accepting a little less today allows these young blocks the time to reach their full expression in the years to come. In this way, the vineyard becomes less of a production unit and more of a carefully tended garden, where each plant is given the space needed to thrive.

In the cellar, Nic follows the same philosophy of attentive restraint. Each parcel ferments with its own native yeasts, carrying the microbial fingerprint of its site. Oak comes from coopers who share our respect for forest and farm. All decisions pass through a simple filter: Does this serve the whole? Nic and I discuss keeping certain Chardonnay parcels separate. We may release a special series of wines from these maiden blocks if their quality and individuality merit it.

Nothing is decided yet, and that uncertainty adds to the excitement. For now, we are content to listen, block by block, as this new voice in the Oldenburg Vineyards chorus begins to introduce itself. The aim is not to impose a style but to let the wines find their own natural voice.

We invite you to join us on this journey – whether by visiting, tasting, or simply following our progress – to witness firsthand how everything is coming together. Here on Rondekop, nature leads, and we do our best to keep pace.

New vintage release: Oldenburg Vineyards Chenin Blanc 2024

Oldenburg Vineyards Chenin Blanc is distinguished by its elegance and sense of place, and the newly released 2024 vintage is no exception.

From a dry, low-yielding season, the wine was wild-fermented in seasoned French oak and Austrian foudre, with bâtonnage and extended lees contact, revealing its complexity slowly and deliberately.

In the glass, it is pale lemon, with aromas of lime zest, wild nettle, and dried hay, lifted by subtle hints of fennel and chamomile. Barrel ageing adds just a whisper of brioche, lending depth without distraction.

On the palate, it is crisp and mineral, with bright acidity, a fine chalky texture, and flavours of lemon pith, green pear, and crushed herbs, finishing long with a delicate saline lift. At 13.3% alcohol, it is approachable now yet structured to develop gracefully over the next 5–8 years.

Available for purchase and tasting in The Tasting Room.

For more information, contact Private Client Manager Delaille Raubenheimer at delaille@oldenburgvineyards.com.

Library and Vertical tastings in February 2026

Library tasting: 2016 - Decade to date tasting

Join us for a retrospective tasting that showcases the evolution of Oldenburg Vineyards’ 2016 vintage, now approaching a decade in bottle. This curated selection offers a rare opportunity to explore how time has shaped four distinctive varieties: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Grenache Noir, and Syrah – each expressing the refinement, balance, and depth that define this exceptional vintage.

Price: R600 per person

Vertical tasting: Chenin Blanc

Join us on a journey through one of South Africa’s most widely planted cultivars, tasting the evolution of Oldenburg Vineyards’ Chenin Blanc over the past six years. Experience the distinctive expression of the Rondekop terroir through this elegant variety.

Price: R550 per person

All Library and Vertical tastings are strictly by appointment only. Tastings include our complimentary snack platter of olives, cheese, and olive oil crackers

Click HERE to book.

Adrian Vanderspuy, proprietor of Oldenburg Vineyards