Juniper hunt yields variety of seedlings
WELLINGTON: New Zealand is one step closer to establishing the country’s first plantation of Juniperus communis — whose berries are the key ingredient of gin — following a nationwide search for the elusive conifer.
About 40 trees were discovered as part of the Great New Zealand Juniper Hunt, and seedlings are now being nurtured at Massey University and at two locations in Taranaki.
Egmont Village lifestyle block owner Marlene Busby had aspirations of making gin herself when she snipped a bit of juniper bush at a garden centre some 30 years ago.
‘‘At the time I sort of took a little bit. They were going to pull them out . . . so it didn’t really [matter] anyway.
‘‘And anyhow I came home and I planted it — made a cutting out of it and I grew it, but little did I know I needed a male and a female, and it’s never ever fruited.’’
Ms Busby said she had no hesitation about getting in touch when she heard about the Great New Zealand Juniper Hunt.
‘‘Of course not. It’s lucky that it’s still here because it’s very prickly, extremely prickly.
‘‘In fact, when you pick the berries, you have to wear like rubber gloves, because you just get so prickled.’’
The hunt was the brainchild of husband and wife distillers Dave and Jo James, of Juno Gin, in New Plymouth.
Mr James said there were about 70 ginmakers in New Zealand, all using imported juniper berries or cones.
‘‘And we will use about a tonne of berries [a year] when we get going full noise in our distillery, so if you multiply that by all the other distilleries throughout New Zealand and then think about that, there might be distilleries in Australia and elsewhere in the southern hemisphere who all import their berries from the northern hemisphere.
‘‘So there’s an opportunity there to not only support the local market, but also the export market.’’
New Zealandgrown berries would have other advantages, too, he said.
‘‘You can source the alcohol from New Zealand. You can source the water from New Zealand, but the primary ingredient to provide the botanical or aromatic flavour has to be imported.
‘‘So to be able to get the berries or cones here in New Zealand means that we actually have a wholly New Zealandmade product, which gives us quite an interesting sales aspect into the export market.’’
Mrs James said the juniper hunt turned up plants from the Far North to the deep South, reinforcing that proposition.
‘‘We are still doing some of the DNA analysis, but early results show that we’ve got a nice variety of plants.
‘‘So we’re not looking at just a single piece of root stock that was brought into New Zealand back in the ’60s or ’70s and then propagated off just one tree. It looks like we’ve got a really nice mix of trees.’’
Horticulture production lecturer at Massey University Svetla SofkovaBobcheva is a scientific leader for the project.
She said analysis of New Zealand juniper berries collected as part of the hunt revealed they have a more bitter aromatic profile than their northern hemisphere cousins and have a different oil composition in the North and South Islands.
‘‘In other words, they are very much different from the globally used juniper berries for gin production,’’ Dr SofkovaBobcheva said.
‘‘What we can produce here locally will be very much different compared to the rest of the world.’’
The seedlings sourced from the juniper hunt should be ready for planting out in 18 months. — RNZ