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Reach for Ribera: Soils That Shape the Wines
Travelling through Ribera del Duero, it quickly becomes clear that the region is far from uniform. While altitude and climate often dominate discussions of Ribera’s vineyards, the soils beneath the vines are just as important in shaping the character of the wines. Across the Duero valley the landscape forms a patchwork of limestone slopes, clay terraces and sandy riverbanks. These soils were formed over thousands of years by geological movement and the slow erosion of the riv
Apr 63 min read


Reach for Ribera: Why Altitude Matters
One of the defining characteristics of Ribera del Duero is its altitude. The vineyards stretch along the Duero River across a plateau that sits significantly higher than many of Europe’s better-known wine regions. In many places vines are planted between 750 and 950 metres above sea level, with some sites climbing even higher. At first glance the landscape appears vast and open — rolling slopes, wide skies and scattered villages surrounded by low bush-trained vines. Yet this
Apr 12 min read


Reach for Ribera: Living with an Extreme Climate
Spend time in Ribera del Duero and one thing quickly becomes clear — this is not an easy place to grow grapes. The vineyards sit high on the Castilian plateau, where summers can be fiercely hot and winters bitterly cold. Rainfall is limited and spring frosts are never far from the minds of growers. Locals often describe the climate with a phrase that has become part of Ribera folklore: nine months of winter and three months of hell. It may sound dramatic, but it captures the
Apr 12 min read


Reach for Ribera: The People Behind the Wines
“The identity of Ribera del Duero lies not only in its vineyards, but in the people who continue to care for them.” In Ribera del Duero, the vineyards may define the landscape, but it is the growers who give the region its character. Across the Duero valley thousands of families cultivate vines that have often been in their care for generations. Many vineyards are divided into small parcels — sometimes no more than half a hectare — creating a patchwork of plots scattered acro
Apr 13 min read


Reach for Ribera: Old Vines and the Future of the Vineyard
“Old vines bring both heritage and resilience to the vineyards of Ribera del Duero.” If soils shape the vineyard beneath the vines, age adds another layer of character above it. Walk through the vineyards of Ribera del Duero and one detail quickly stands out. Many of the vines are old. Across the region it is common to find vineyards planted forty, sixty or even eighty years ago. Some parcels contain vines that have quietly endured for more than a century. These vineyards tel
Apr 13 min read


Reach for Ribera: A Landscape That Shapes the Wine
Drive north from Madrid and the landscape begins to open out. The vineyards of Ribera del Duero appear gradually across the Castilian plateau, scattered across rolling limestone slopes and sandy terraces that follow the course of the Duero River. Villages such as La Aguilera, Quintana del Pidio, and Pedrosa de Duero sit quietly among the vineyards, their stone houses and underground cellars reflecting centuries of winemaking tradition. Ribera del Duero may only have gained De
Apr 13 min read
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