Subscribe to the digital edition of TraveLife magazine
New Issue: Apr/Jun 2012
View past issues
Order yours for FREE

Aruba’s wine is as sweet as the man who makes it Bookmark and Share
By Marc Atchison   
Vincente Kock proudly displays the wine he makes in ultra-hot Aruba.
Vincente Kock proudly displays the wine he makes in ultra-hot Aruba.
ARUBA – The elderly man with the chiseled face and skin like leather walking towards us doesn’t look like a vintner. But then again, tropical Aruba doesn’t look like a wine growing region, either.

Vincente Kock swings open the gates to his modest home in Santa Cruz, a small town located in the middle of this Caribbean treasure, and waves us into a neatly-kept yard filled with barking dogs.

“I am so happy you have come to see me,” says the 73-year-old former insurance salesman who has become a local legend thanks to his unusual “hobby.”

Kock, who lives here with his wife and two daughters, leads us to his backyard where, shockingly, rows of hearty grape vines stand baking in the blistering Caribbean sun.

“Everyone is so surprised that I grow grapes in this climate but I’ve been doing it for 20 years now and my wine is pretty good,” smiles the proud man who says he started dreaming about making wine when he was a schoolboy.

“There was a house I used to pass every day on the way to and from school and the Dutchman who owned it had some grape vines growing in a pot on his porch,” remembers the likeable Kock.
Kock mixes Aruba’s sea grapes into his unique wine.
Kock mixes Aruba’s sea grapes into his unique wine.

“It fascinated me how the grapes would grow every day and I vowed that one day I, too, would grow grapes on Aruba.”

Tropical regions present obvious climate hardships to growing grapes but these days Aruba has a particular problem – no water.

“We have been in a draught situation for almost two years,” says Kock, who gets water trucked to his home weekly to help nourish the vines.

Kock’s story has been featured in international magazines and newspapers and every year he welcomes inquisitive tourists to his home. Some have become friends and supply him with vines from places like France and Italy.

“People, especially Europeans, really appreciate the tradition of wine and are so pleased that I have made a success of it in these harsh conditions,” says Kock as he shows me some vines given to him as a gift by a French wine maker.

The hearty Mediterranean grape is what Kock features mostly in his tiny vineyard but he mixes other grapes with the Med variety, including sea grapes.
Visitors to Aruba from wine countries like France and Italy bring Kock vines.
Visitors to Aruba from wine countries like France and Italy bring Kock vines.

“They (sea grapes) give the wine a nice sweet taste,” says the man who traces his roots back to Aruba’s Aboriginals.

Aruba’s climate allows Kock to get two harvests a year – June/July and November/December. From the harvests he produces about 400 bottles under the label “Vino Vince” which he sells locally at craft shows and hotels.

“My daughter suggested the name Vino Vince and it sounded better than Vino Kock, so we went with it,” laughs the man, whose attractive label, featuring Aruba’s iconic diva-diva tree ,is, if nothing else, worth buying a bottle.

Kock stores the water needed to irrigate the vines in a small well filled with fish (tilapia).

“The fish keep the water clean and the vines need clean water.”

Kock once used a discarded jet engine casing to store the water – it still lies at the front of his property - but he finds the well is a better idea.

The man with the permanent smile on his face also grows many other fruits on his property – bananas, cherries, papayas and mandarins among them.

He presses the grapes off property but ferments the wine in a cool shed at the back of his home.
The hearty Mediterranean grape is what Kock finds grows best in Aruba.
The hearty Mediterranean grape is what Kock finds grows best in Aruba.

Europeans, who like his wine when they open a bottle on the island, complain that Vino Vince does not taste the same when they get it back home. Kock is not surprised.

“Cool air will change the complexity of the wine I grow in this hot climate, so I always tell people to enjoy the wine while they are here.”

After showing us around the grounds, Kock invites us to pull up a chair in his kitchen and pours us a glass of his grape.

The light bodied vintage offers an interesting taste – a bit too young to impress, though.

Vino Vince may not be vintage wine but the man who makes it under the most grueling growing conditions, certainly is.

Cheers, Vincente Kock!
Bottles of Vino Vince are taken home by tourists.
Bottles of Vino Vince are taken home by tourists.
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

< Prev
Daily Travel update
CNN.com - TRAVEL
Cheap flights to World-Wide Destinationsjetsettravel.ca

Posted: May 9, 2012

Discount Car Rental:  Rent an economy size vehicle for C$9.99 this weekend
Hawaii:  Up to 40% off 25 resorts from US$79.  Travel now until Jun 30th
Henderson, NV:  Brand new 4* hotel near Las Vegas for US$99.  Valid thru July 31
Montreal, QC:  Fly from Toronto for C$128 + air taxes return. Travel dates May 23 - Jun 27
Chicago, IL:  Fly from Vancouver for C$158 + air taxes.  Depart Jun 2 & Return Jun 9th
Carnival:  4-day Western Caribbean cruise fr Miami for C$179. Sails Dec 3rd
Orlando, FL:  Fly from Toronto for C$299 incl. air taxes.  Depart June 1
Ocho Rios, JA:  7-day all-incl. for C$354 + air taxes from Toronto.  Departs May 31st
Ft. Myers, FL:  7-day air + hotel package for C$499 + air taxes.  Departs June 7th
MSC Cruises:  11 Days Mediterranean Cruise incl. return airfare fr. C$1,599 + taxes. 
Photo Gallery
Travel Blogs
Syndicate
RSS Feed