After the harvest…
After the earliest harvest on record, brought about by the warm summer, the last grapes of 2025 were picked here at Three Choirs Vineyard on 9th October.
The harvest is the biggest and most important event every year on the vineyard calendar. And the key thing for us is the quality of fruit, rather than the quantity.
Thomas Shaw, managing director of Three Choirs Vineyard, said: “If we have a lot of fruit, we generally don’t get such good quality. This year we’ve got very good quality grapes!
“It’s not such a good year for making sparkling wines because the acidity in the grapes was low due to the high temperatures, but 2025 is an excellent year for making still wines.”
Now the grapes have all been picked and pressed, they are in tanks in the winery and fermentation is taking place.
By the end of November or early December, fermentation should be complete, and the winemakers will start to taste the individual tanks and decide how that wine is going to be used – whether it is going to be a blend or a single variety. Those decisions will be made before Christmas this year, rather than afterwards, as is often the case.

Thomas Shaw, managing director of Three Choirs Vineyard, said: “The sugars are good this year. We look for the sugar levels in the grapes, because the sugar turns to alcohol.
“Acidity matters too. If you don’t get that, the wine isn’t very pleasant to drink! The acidity is what gives the wine its freshness.”
In warmer climates, the grapes don’t have as much acidity, so winemakers are allowed to add it to the wine, but that isn’t something we need to do in the UK.
Sometimes people talk about a ‘bumper harvest’ as if that is a good thing. 2025 hasn’t been a bumper harvest, the quantities have been what we would expect and hope for every year.
Thomas continued: “If you get good quality grapes, you don’t get huge quantity. A good year for quality won’t ever be record quantities. For us, it’s the quality of the grapes which matters. Making millions of bottles of wine isn’t a good thing. We would choose quality over quantity every time.”
As well as producing our own wine, we have dozens of contract customers. These other vineyards bring us their grapes and we do the pressing and fermentation for them. They tell us they are experiencing the same as us – their crops are early and good quality. So, 2025 is going to be a good year for British wines across the board, not just for Three Choirs Vineyard!
Thomas concluded: “Now is the busy time for the winery. We’ve got the fermentation to start, which will take six to eight weeks. Hopefully it will all be finished well before Christmas this year. This is what winemakers live for. This is the time of year that gets us truly excited.”
More from our blog...



