University vineyard cultivates wine - and learning

Clare AshfordBBC Radio Shropshire
News imageHarper Adams Two bottles of wine are standing in green grass. The left bottle is a rosé wine with a black cap. The liquid is a pinkish red and the grey label says "Harper Adams University Buttery Hill Rosé." The wine on the left is white, slightly yellowish in colour and also has a black cap. The grey label says "Harper Adams University Cambrian White".Harper Adams
The 2024 Buttery Hill Rosé was produced on Harper Adams' own vineyard in Shropshire, which is also used in teaching

A university says its own vineyard has not only produced its first wine, but is helping educate students in the process.

Two hectares (five acres) of about 10 different varieties of grapes were planted by Harper Adams University in 2023, on land called Buttery Hill on its campus in Edgmond, Shropshire.

On Thursday, the university will launch its 2024 Buttery Hill Rosé.

Prof Frank Vriesekoop from the university said it could be considered a by-product: "Really, that vineyard is a classroom and a laboratory, but that doesn't mean that we don't try to get a really high-quality product out of that."

"Internally, we have students who are either in agriculture or who have an interest in beverages - we have used the vineyard for those purposes.

"We also have business-related degrees and people who are thinking about what it takes within the agriculture industry to set up new directions."

News imageHarper Adams A man with grey hair and black wire glasses is wearing a red jacket and is standing in a field that has a blurred vineyard in the backgroundHarper Adams
Prof Frank Vriesekoop says the wine is just a by-product of the vineyard, which forms part of university studies

Vriesekoop said the site had been designed to adapt to the changing British climate.

"Our vineyard... has been set up to be able to deal with the notion that the weather gets warmer and wetter, the global warming aspect," he said.

"We put in some really traditional grape varieties, and really modern grape varieties.

"The really traditional probably struggle a little bit in the longer term with diseases, but the newer ones are pretty much disease-resistant."

As for the wine, this is just the beginning.

"We've got... some rosé, we've got some white, we've got some red, and we've got some sparkling in the pipeline," Vriesekoop said.

Not only has the vineyard been teaching students while the crops have been growing, but it has been shaping education for future cohorts.

"At the moment we're in the process of developing and fine-tuning a whole series of courses related to growing grapes and making wine," he added.

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