Fighting Gully Road Wines

Winemaking in a Historic Asylum Workshop

Sitting atop the golden granite township of Beechworth, amongst stunning gardens, is Mayday Hills—a decommissioned asylum dating back to 1867. The old maintenance workshop of the asylum has been cleared of wood lathes and blacksmithing furnaces, and is now where Fighting Gully Road wines are made.

The Winery

This is a collaborative space, shared with friend and fellow winemaker Adrian (A.) Rodda. Adrian and Mark have been sharing a workspace for ten years. It began in a little winery at Smiths vineyard, then newly-leased by Mark, where the two progressed from pressing 10 tonnes of fruit in year one to 125 tonnes in year two. In search of a little more room to move, Mark and Adrian relocated to a spacious old apple store in the neighbouring township of Stanley, only ten minutes away but an additional 300 metres above sea level. After two vintages of having their fermenting reds get so cold they would stop fermenting and require reinoculation, luck would have it that the eclectic Mayday Hills maintenance workshop appeared.

The maintenance workshop space may have contributed a little of its own spirit of experimentation and perseverance to the winery. The four vintages produced here have seen the first Sangiovese trials, experimentation with wild and indigenous yeasts, and perfection of barrel ageing techniques in unexpected varietals.

Everything about the potential of the wine is there in the grapes, which Mark oversees. And then in the winery, he expertly captures what has been brought through the door.

Wine Tasting

By appointment only. Mark would be pleased to meet you, show you the vineyard and winery, and taste some wines of interest. As an all-rounder doing many different things on any given day, appointments must be arranged in advance. To arrange a visit, please call Mark on +61 (0) 407 261 373.