- Riverina Wine Grapes Marketing Board
182 Yambil Street, Griffith NSW 2680
The Riverina plains were deposited by the action of ancient streams upon the remnants of the Great Dividing Range and thus consist of highly variable alluvial soils with sands and gravels embedded in clays.
The main soil type of the Riverina is red-brown earth. It has a loamy surface horizon 10-35 cm deep and passes abruptly to a reddish-brown clay which contains lime at a depth of about 70 cm. Most of these red-brown earths, although deposited by ancient streams, have been elevated above the general plain level and are found around the lower hill slopes and river ridges. Many of these contain limestone rubble. It is on these soils which are generally free-draining around Griffith and Leeton that the majority of the regions vines are planted.
The City of Griffith is central to the region, lying at the foothills of a low range of hills rising above the Murrumbidgee Valley. Land to the East, South and West of Griffith is generally flat comprising traditional red/brown earths ranging from duplex soils in the horticultural areas to heavy cracking clays of the floodplain soils. To the North West there are patches of Mallee high calcium soils.
The Board functions under the Wine Grapes Marketing Board (Reconstitution) Act 2003. Under this legislation the Board has the following agricultural industry services:
- The development of a code of conduct for contract negotiations between wine grape growers and wineries,
- The development of draft contract provisions with respect to the sale of MIA wine grapes to wineries, including provisions with respect to:
- The prices to be paid by wineries, and
- The terms and conditions of payment to be observed by wineries, in relation to MIA wine grapes delivered to them by wine grape growers,
- The promotion of private contracts for sales of MIA wine grapes to wineries by wine grape growers,
