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Hunter Valley: Newcastle's World-Famous Wine Region
The Pokolbin wine district is one of Australia's oldest and most celebrated wine regions.
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The Pokolbin wine district is one of Australia's oldest and most celebrated wine regions.

The Hunter Valley's wine region begins less than an hour's drive from Newcastle, giving the city direct access to one of Australia's oldest wine producing districts and the most concentrated cellar door tourism experience in the country. The Pokolbin area's concentration of cellar doors, restaurants, and accommodation within a compact geographic area creates the wine tourism experience that draws visitors from Sydney and Newcastle on weekends and that supports a significant event tourism economy built around the region's hospitality and wine assets.
Hunter Valley Semillon is the region's most distinctive contribution to Australian wine, a variety that produces wines of remarkable age-worthiness from the region's warm climate, with the combination of naturally high acidity and low alcohol creating wines that transform over decades into complex aged Semillons of a character unique to the Hunter. Young Hunter Semillon is crisp and mineral; aged examples develop honeyed complexity that makes them amongst Australia's most prized collectible wines.
The accommodation infrastructure of the Hunter Valley, ranging from luxury vineyard estates and boutique guesthouses to the resort hotels that serve the conference and incentive travel market, provides a capacity to host the visitor numbers that the region's reputation generates. The combination of cellar door access, restaurant quality, and spa facilities at the premium accommodation properties creates the weekend experience that the Sydney and Newcastle markets support at a price point premium that the destination's quality justifies.
Hunter Valley Gardens at Pokolbin provides a non-wine attraction that has broadened the region's appeal beyond the wine tourism core demographic. The extensive garden complex, with its themed sections and the seasonal events including the Christmas lights display and the tulip festival, draws visitors who may not be wine-focused but who respond to the gardens' scale and horticultural quality.
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Published by The Daily Newcastle
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