| Maribel |
Jun 7th, 2002 07:39 PM |
happy,<BR>Yes, there are several "wine routes", but the most hospitable to tourists, most open to "wine tourism" is the Rioja. We have friends in the wine industry there and have done quite a bit of this from our base in delightful Laguardia, the capital of La Rioja Alavesa, in the Alava province of the Basque Country. For my money, this is where Rioja's best reds are produced. And they say that the 2001 vintage has been spectacular, one of the very best EVER! <BR>I'd start in lovely, medieval, completely walled Laguardia at the new Villa Lucia Wine Thematic Center and adjacent "Bodegas Samaniego" <BR>www.alavaincoming.com/english/produ-turcul-vino.html<BR> <BR>also in Laguardia you can visit "Bodegas Palacios" (Tues-Fri 11-2, wks. noon -2) or the new bodega designed by famed Valencian architect Santiago Calatrava, "Bodegas Ysios"<BR><BR>Then go south a bit down to Cenicero to visit the chateau-like "Bodegas Riojanas" (tours in English at 11). <BR><BR>The new Frank Gehry designed pavillion/hotel/restaurant/tourist complex for "Bodegas Marques de Riscal" in nearby Elciego won't be open for another couple of years.<BR><BR>Then to Haro and head to the Barrio de la Estacion area to tour one of the following:<BR><BR>La Rioja Alta (M-Fri morn. only)<BR>Paternina (M-Sat. morn. and aft)<BR>Muga (mornings only)<BR><BR>And venture a bit into the Sierra de Cantabria to the estate winery "La Granja Nuestra Senora de Remelluri" in Labastida ((M-Sat. 8-noon, 3-5)<BR><BR>Check the following web sites for current opening times for Rioja bodegas:<BR><BR>www.jrnet.com<BR>www.filewine.es<B R>www.redrioja<BR><BR>And if you decide to do the Rioja wine route, pick up a copy of "Rioja and its Wines" by Ron Scarborough (Survival Books)<BR>www.survivalbooks.net)<BR><BR><BR><BR>
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