A swath of Victorian orchards on some of the nation’s most productive land are set to be sold off in a potential mega deal.
An almost 500ha slice of Victoria’s best orchards, close to the size of the Melbourne suburb of Bentleigh, is up for grabs in an almost $100m overhaul of the state’s fruit supply.
A quartet of Victorian fruitgrowers linked to the Goulburn Valley have teamed up to list their farms in an “exit plan” which puts land that produces tens of millions of apples, pears and plums every year on the market with a $24.75m asking price.
It is one of two amalgamated fruit farming hubs currently now for sale in the region, and spans 254hawhile producing 30,495 bins of fruit a year, equivalent to up to 76 million pieces of fruit.
RELATED: Iconic Adelaide Hills berry farm listed for sale amid fruit fly scare
Beremboke: Home with a concrete survival bunker for sale
Werribee family’s backyard bigger than the MCG for sale at $18m
The four families’ holdings included in the latest offering cover the Riversby orchard of former Fruit Growers Victoria chairman Ian Bolitho.
He is joined by Silver Orchards, run by Maurice and Rien Silverstein, the Central Park pear orchard operated by third-generation farmers Matt, Jason and Mark Rachele, as well as Mark and Jenny Morey’s Marenny Vale Orchards sites.
Locations include around Shepparton East, Bunbartha, Nathalia and Coomboona.
The quality of fruit is checked at Ian Bolitho’s Riversby orchard.
Fruit pickers work the harvest of Mr Bolitho’s 91 Dougan Rd, Coomboona, property.
The combined listing follows the offering of the Goulburn Valley region’s 216ha Brooklyn Project, which combined six properties for an anticipated $70m sale earlier this year.
In total, the two listings would produce in the vicinity of 150 million pieces of fruit a year, and cover about 470ha of land — the same size as the Melbourne suburb of Bentleigh.
Ray White’s Jason Hellyer is representing the latest farming families planning a sale, and said “this is their exit plan”.
Mr Hellyer said they were anticipating the listings would fit the appetite of a mix of growers who might consider one or two of the farms, plus institutional investors who might snap up the full lot.
The Silverstein family’s Silver Orchards form a substantive chunk of the offering.
The farmers’ 105-131 Prentice Rd, Orrvale, site is set up for significant fruit yields.
He’s also not ruling out international interest after early contact in the effort to sell what he is calling a dominant force in the fresh fruit market, which combined has more than 254,000 trees and has access to more than 271 megalitres of water.
“Whether a buyer takes the whole aggregation, leveraging the 5000sq m packing facility at Central Park or secures a single site like Silver Orchards, they are stepping into established businesses with decades of proven success,” Mr Hellyer said.
A third-generation fruit grower, Mr Bolitho said after 46 years he was ready to retire and let his orchard go to the next level, but was doing so with “mixed emotions”.
“We have enjoyed fruit growing in the Goulburn Valley, it is incredibly rewarding to nurture a fruit tree from winter dormant pruning, through the spring flowering, and on to harvesting juicy sweet fruit that people will enjoy,” he said.
“Our orchards are designed and managed with the long-term vision of sustainable long-term profits.”
The Marenny Vale farm site covers a mix of fruits, but predominantly apples.
The orchard has a reliable water source.
He added that at around 246ha the combined holdings of his part of the offering was among the biggest you would be likely to see.
For another similar-sized operation to also be on the market, he said there “wouldn’t be too many single entities with as much as that”.
The Silverstein family said after raising five sons on their farm and spending decades on agricultural research they too were ready to retire from the farm that produces apples, pears and plums.
“Maurice was born on this property, and I moved here in 1987, it has been our whole lives,” Ms Silverstein said.
“It’s bittersweet to sell, but there is a real sense of optimism for the industry’s future with export markets growing, and we want to see a new owner take that potential to the next level.”
An about 5000sq m warehouse with cool storage features in the Central Park Orchard.
Plums are also on the list of fruits grown at the farm run by brothers Matt, Jason and Mark Rachele.
Expressions of interest in the family farms close on July 1.
Agricultural real estate firm LAWD’s Georgia Hole said the Brooklyn Project site remained for sale, but had attracted interest.
Sign up to the Herald Sun Weekly Real Estate Update. Click here to get the latest Victorian property market news delivered direct to your inbox.
MORE: Vic home building boom takes $370m hit
CGT changes cause alarm for investor with $15m portfolio
Nar Nar Goon cattle farmers to make $80m-plus in massive land sale
