![]() Tuffon Hall Vineyard wines are vegan and the packaging for them is 100% biodegradable and recyclable. Tuffon Hall Vineyard often works with charities such as FWAG, the farming and wildlife advisory group. There is an abundance of rabbits, hares, foxes, pheasants, partridge and fallow deer surrounding the vineyard. Tuffon Hall Vineyard plant acres of wild flowers and hedgerows to encourage bees, insects and birds. They have also converted a 400 year old threshing barn to host wine tours and tastings, plus a small number of weddings each year. The Crowther family continue to diversify, between farming arable crops and producing award-winning English wines from their vineyard. Angus and Pod Crowther are fourth generation farmers who are the current custodians of the farm, with their four young children Amelie, Beatrice, Charlotte and Hamish. Tuffon Hall is a small family run business. If you're lucky, and quiet enough, you may catch a glimpse of the abundant rabbits, hares, foxes, muntjac and fallow deer who hunt and graze among the vines. ![]() There’s a lovely walk around the vineyard right from the door where you can see the vines that produce the wine available for hosting your own wine tasting if it takes your fancy. A little further afield is Gosfield lake, where you can wild swim or try your hand at water skiing, with a handful of great local pubs to refuel at on the way home.Īs the sun sinks low, relax and pour yourself a drink of Tuffon’s very own gin or wine, before slipping into the hot tub to soak beneath the evening sky. ![]() Start your morning with a coffee whilst relaxing in one of the jolly, green velvet chairs and planning your day ahead. A swish, split-level living space awaits you, with a cosy double bed on the upper level, accessible by ladder, while the perfect little kitchen, bathroom with rainforest shower and living area snuggles below. Stepping into the Silo, you’ll be amazed by the contrast of the inside and outside. Its circular, corrugated exterior, speckled with red rust tones, overlooks fields of endlessly sprawling grape vines, with the neighbouring shepherd’s hut 50 metres away. The Inner West Council, which covers the site, has previously raised concerns about the billboards due to the silos’ prominent position and heritage significance.The Grain Silo is the latest delicious offering to be crafted on the small family-run vineyard at Tuffon Hall. Industry publication AdNews reported in late 2013 that the billboard was the most expensive to rent in Australia, at a cost of $250,000 per 28 days, and was typically booked out six months in advance.Įye Drive Sydney’s proposal for a 10-year extension has been resisted by the nearby City of Sydney, which has long argued that rolling approvals and extensions for the site were at odds with the intent of the original application and not in the public interest. ![]() The towering structures sit at the heart of the industrial Bays West precinct that runs from Pyrmont to Balmain and is earmarked for a massive state-led urban renewal project. Eye Drive Sydney, a subsidiary of advertising company oOh!media, last year submitted a proposal to the NSW Department of Planning seeking to extend its consent for the advertising billboard for another 10 years to 2032.Įach day about 130,000 drivers on the Anzac Bridge pass the silos, which were built in the 1920s and are used to store sugar and cement.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |