81. Rhône Overview and the Mistral Wind Explained
Wine Educate Newsletter — Your Weekly Wine Study Boost! If you are studying wine or just love learning, this is your home base for smart, friendly study help. I keep it clear, useful, and welcoming so you actually look forward to it. Each Tuesday you’ll get Level 2 multiple choice questions you can answer in minutes Level 3 essay prompts with simple pointers on where to aim Class news, events, and trip updates Short quizzes and tasting tips to keep skills sharp Join us here: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup Episode 81 — Rhône Overview and the Mistral Wind Explained Host: Joanne Close Focus: A clear overview of the Rhône and a practical explainer on the Mistral wind. This is a Level 3 essential that often appears on exams, and a helpful frame for Level 2 students before you study North and South separately. What we cover Where the Rhône sits From just south of Lyon down to the borders with Languedoc and Provence Pre-Alps to the east, Massif Central to the west Latitude 44–45, similar to Oregon’s Willamette Valley Production snapshot About 75% red, 16% rosé, 9% white Roughly 95% of total volume comes from the Southern Rhône Appellations you will see Côtes du Rhône AOC (1937) applies across North and South, used mostly in the South Côtes du Rhône Villages AOC (1960) applies only in the South, with 95 named villages North vs South Different grapes, climate, soils, and training systems Unified by the Rhône River and the Mistral The Mistral, simply explained What it is A cold, dry north wind driven by pressure differences that accelerates down the valley How strong it can get Often 30–45 mph, gusts can exceed 60 mph Recorded at 72 mph on April 6, 2003, just below Category 1 hurricane strength When it shows up Most common in winter and early spring Often arrives with clear blue skies because the air is very dry Why it helps and hurts Helps: dries leaves and bunches, lowers disease pressure, supports organic viticulture Hurts: can shatter flowers at fruit set and reduce yields, can break shoots or damage vines How growers adapt Northern Rhône Choose sites in lateral valleys to reduce exposure Steep, terraced, south to southeast aspects for heat and light Individual stakes or teepee stakes to anchor Syrah against the wind Southern Rhône Fewer natural wind breaks, so plant windbreaks and use careful trellising Grenache is bush trained low to the ground for protection and soil warmth Syrah is more wind sensitive and benefits from strong trellis support WSET study angle Level 3: be ready to explain the Mistral’s cause, timing, benefits, risks, and the training choices that respond to it. Know where Côtes du Rhône and Côtes du Rhône Villages fit on labels. Level 2: use this overview to organize your thinking before studying the Northern and Southern Rhône in detail. Coming next A focused episode on the Northern Rhône A focused episode on the Southern Rhône Newsletter extras for all levels, including a Level 3 essay prompt and Level 2 quizzes for both North and South Wine Educate Newsletter — Your Weekly Wine Study Boost! If you are studying wine or just love learning, this is your home base for smart, friendly study help. I keep it clear, useful, and welcoming so you actually look forward to it. Each Tuesday you’ll get Level 2 multiple choice questions you can answer in minutes Level 3 essay prompts with simple pointers on where to aim Class news, events, and trip updates Short quizzes and tasting tips to keep skills sharp Join us here: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup