i started out with an all-day tour of both the chartrons district (where the wine merchants were historically located in the city) and st. emilion.
a luncheon was featured between the city tour and the trip out to st. emilion, at a 'cheese restaurant' in the city. after feasting on warm goat cheese and duck confit, they took us downstairs to the cheese room, where we could serve ourselves from a selection of over 75 different cheeses. it was heavenly!
place de la bourse, reflected in the miroir d'eau - a flat 'place' that they fill with just a touch of water to create the effect. sometimes, the jets produce vapor and it's beautiful and misty.
more bordeaux.
i also did 2 half day tours; one to graves/sauternes and another to medoc. they all shared the standard agenda of meeting the manager/owner, seeing the fields, (no fruit yet, this time of year), then inside to see the vats in the fermenting rooms and the stocks of barrels in the chais and tasting afterwards.
the village of st. emilion
the river front
place de la bourse, reflected in the miroir d'eau - a flat 'place' that they fill with just a touch of water to create the effect. sometimes, the jets produce vapor and it's beautiful and misty.
most days i was there, this spot was filled with adults and children walking barefoot and generally frolicking in the water.
more bordeaux.
i also did 2 half day tours; one to graves/sauternes and another to medoc. they all shared the standard agenda of meeting the manager/owner, seeing the fields, (no fruit yet, this time of year), then inside to see the vats in the fermenting rooms and the stocks of barrels in the chais and tasting afterwards.
this is in sauternes, home of sweet dessert wine.
one of the property managers, showing us the fields and explaining the wine making process.
drinking sauternes in the chai (barrel room)
more magic!
the last day, i went to the dune of pyla - on the coast, not far from the city.
this is another one of those times when i wish photographs could do the subject justice. it's impossible for me to convey the scope of this dune. it is HUGE!!! naturally formed over the course of 4,000 years, it spans 500 meters from east to west, 2.7 km from north to south and its height varies but is usually around 110 meters high. (if the metric doesn't mean anything to you, get out your google converter tool.) incredible place for a picnic, to say the least.
looking n -s
the climb up.
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