Mt Uncle Distillery
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Family-owned tropical distillery on the Atherton Tablelands, an hour west of Cairns, nestled at the foothill of Mount Uncle within a banana plantation. Founded in 2001 by head distiller Mark Watkins. Produces whisky from Queensland barley alongside award-winning rum, gin and agave spirit. Over 200 barrels ageing in the barrel room. Won Gin of the Year and Best in Show by Country at the 2021 London Spirits Competition. Tropical climate creates a unique maturation environment distinct from cooler Australian whisky regions. Cellar door open for tastings, tours and cocktails.
Production Details
The Mt Uncle Distillery Tale
In the shadow of Mount Uncle, where banana palms sway in the humid Queensland air, Mark Watkins made an audacious choice in 2001. While most Australian distillers sought the temperate climates of Tasmania or the southern mainland, Watkins planted his flag in the Atherton Tablelands, an hour's drive west of Cairns, where the tropical heat would become his greatest ally and fiercest adversary.
The distillery sits nestled within his family's banana plantation, a testament to the pioneering spirit that defines Australian whisky. Here, at nearly a thousand feet above sea level, the tablelands catch the moisture-laden winds from the Coral Sea, creating springs that feed the distillery with water as pure as any highland stream. This natural spring water, filtered through ancient volcanic soils, carries the essence of Far North Queensland into every drop.
Where Scottish distillers count maturation in decades, Watkins works with seasons. The tropical climate that ripens his bananas accelerates the whisky's conversation with oak, the extreme temperature swings forcing the spirit deep into barrel staves during scorching days, then drawing it back out through cool highland nights. Each barrel breathes faster here, living years in months.
Over two hundred barrels rest in his barrel room, their contents darkening and concentrating under conditions no Highland distillery has ever known. The Queensland barley that begins this journey transforms not just through fermentation and distillation, but through a maturation process uniquely Australian—aggressive, uncompromising, and utterly distinctive.
The cellar door draws visitors who arrive expecting novelty but leave understanding they've witnessed something profound. This isn't whisky-making borrowed from Scotland or Ireland; it's whisky-making reimagined for the Southern Hemisphere, where seasons flip and rules bend.
Watkins proved that Australian whisky need not apologize for its youth or its unconventional methods. In his tropical stillhouse, surrounded by the rustle of banana leaves and the distant call of rainforest birds, he demonstrated that innovation often requires simply having the courage to let your landscape lead. The mountain that gave the distillery its name stands sentinel over an experiment that has become a testament—Australian whisky belongs wherever bold distillers dare to make it.