Wine Tourism in South America: Where to Go and What to Taste

January 16th, 2012

Outside of the well-known wine-producing countries of France, Italy and Spain, a quiet wine revolution is taking place in the southern cone. Down in South America, winemakers have been using European stock since the Jesuits arrived in the new world, to produce wines that are uncorked, poured, swirled, tasted, drunk, exported and lauded all over the planet.

Geography and climate dictate much of where good wine grapes will grow. Between the grape vines themselves, daily and yearly temperature fluctuations, the amount of rain and sunlight the grapes get, and even the amount of trace minerals in the soil, many factors determine the quality of the grape which vintners begin with, and the quality of the wine they can press and ferment from it. As a rule, grapes grow well at about 20-50 degrees north and south latitude. The climate that yields the best wine grapes is described as “Mediterranean,” with defined seasons.

In South America, Argentina and Chile lead the pack in production, and awards, with a few other countries, such as Uruguay, producing consistently well-reviewed wines for export, while Brazil’s sparkling wines win accolades.

Wine tourism is taking hold in South America, and those from the northern hemisphere who are planning a trip should keep in mind that the seasons are reversed down in the southern cone, with the height of summer in January and February and wine harvests generally taking place in March and April.

South America has wine tasting for every budget, and in many nations. If a multi-day trip to the vineyards is not in the cards, consider a day trip. Or check out events surrounding the vendimia (wine harvest) or other wine tasting events held in cities and near vineyards.

Below you’ll find the main wine-producing, and thereby prime wine-tasting areas in South America, with a heavy focus on the big two, Argentina and Chile, a warning not to forget Uruguay, and information about wine in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, and even Venezuela, each of which are working to carve out a space for themselves in this growing industry.

Argentina

Argentina produced 2,900,000 metric tons of wine in 2007, which places it ahead of Chile in terms of production, though Argentina’s neighbour across the Andes actually exports more wine to other countries.

Visitors to Argentina will find that most wine tasting takes place in and around the city of Mendoza, which enjoys an extremely long spring and summer, and contributes to the health of the vines and the quality of the wines produced.

Argentina’s signature wine is Malbec, a red wine originally from the Bordeaux region of France. Argentina has been growing grapes for Malbec for over 150 years, but only in the last 20 has this wine truly taken off, and Argentina now produces more than 70% of the world’s Malbec. It is a dark red, and some people describe hints of blackberries and coffee beans but unless you’re a sommelier or have trained your nose with the Nez du Vin aroma set, you’ll probably just taste it and know if you like it or not, without identifying the underlying notes.

Entrepreneurial travellers and visitors to Mendoza can rent a car and fill it up with friends and strangers to visit the wineries on their own, (with a designated driver, please!), but more commonly, visitors to the area book day trips with travel agencies to take them amid the rolling hills of the wine region. We recommend renting a bicycle to tour the wineries in Mendoza. It is the best way to indulge in the scenery and culture of the wine region at an easy-going pace.

Wine lovers visiting the region may also like to visit areas other than Mendoza which produce excellent wines, such as Salta, to get a full picture of what Argentina has to offer. In addition to Malbec, Argentina also produces Chardonnay, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and also varieties such as Tempranillo, Bonarda, Barbera and Torrontés. Information on Argentine wines can be found on the Wines of Argentina website.

Chile

Just over the Andes from Argentina lies Chile, a diminutive strip of land sandwiched between the ocean and the cordillera, and which is exploiting its wine-growing regions to great advantage in recent years.

Chilean wines are popular exports, and its most fabled variety is Carménère, which has made a particularly big impact after the source vines Bordeaux suffered a blight and all but disappeared in their native France. In Chile the variety continues to be strong, and great efforts are made by the Chilean government to protect Chilean agriculture, including the wine industry.

Wine in Chile is not limited to Carménère, and the nation also produces prize-winning Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah and other varieties. As of this year, Chilean wine represents 40% of the wine imported to the United States, due both to its reputation and price-quality ratio. Chile is mainly known for its red wines, but it also produces quality white wines including Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Riesling, and even a small quantity of Gewürztraminer. Blends and sparkling wines are also taking hold in Chile.

Chilean wine tourism, or enoturismo has taken off in recent years, with multi-day trips offered by various outfitters, which mainly focus on the Colchagua, Maule and Maipo valleys, which are not far from Santiago, though valleys north and south of the capital city also receive visitors.

A “wine train” takes wine tourists to Santa Cruz wineries, and includes tastings on the train as well as folkloric dance and talks on Chilean history, if visitors wish. Multi-day trips can be arranged in groups or privately, on train, by vehicle, or even by bicycle through the various valleys, and several wineries are easy to get to by public transportation, including the mass market Concha y Toro, which is just a few minutes from the end of the Santiago metro line.

For a complete listing the nation’s wine-producing regions, see the Wines of Chile website.

Uruguay

Uruguay, like Chile and Argentina, has a history of wine-production tracing back to its European ancestors. The country is well situated (if a bit humid in places) to produce good wines, and its shining star is Tannat, for which this small, Atlantic nation is known.

Most wine production takes place in the Canelones region, near the capital city of Montevideo. While many amateur wine-lovers would not come to Uruguay for wine tasting on its own, it is not uncommon to take a day or two here after touring some of the more selective wineries in Chile and Argentina.

Visit Uruguay’s wine website for more information about Uruguayan wines, including where to find distributors closer to home.

Colombia

Colombia may also surprise you with the presence of Ain Karim, a vineyard that produces wines under the brand name Marqués de Villa de Leyva, which started production in the 1980s, in the foothills near Sutamarchán. In a country which is largely tropical, and in a zone which is clearly outside of the prime grape-growing here the solution was also to grow grapes at an altitude, to fulfil the need for daily temperature fluctuation. This vineyard’s website proclaims that the vineyard was formed through a combination of inspiration and insanity. It produces Riesling, a German variety and Pinot Noir, originally from France.

Another Colombian wine agglomeration brings together 70 families from 16 communities in the Consorcio del sol de Oro, which together has more than 250,000 plantings, where European specifications are followed to produce Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and Sauvignon Blanc wines, exported to Bogotá (the undisputed gastronomical capital of Colombia), as well as Europe.

Brazil

Brazil is perhaps better-known for cachaça, the grain-alcohol that forms the base of the minty-lemony caipirinha, but several states in this vast country produce wines, including Rio Grande do Sul, Paraná, Santa Catarina, Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais, Bahia, Pernambuco and São Paulo, though the Serra Gaucha, north of Porto Alegre is one of the most commonly-visited.

Recently, Brazilian vintners have brought wines to tastings in Germany and California’s Sonoma. At a recent tasting held in Brazil, whites and sparkling wines were the best received, as the reds suffered from poor climatic conditions (excessive rain) that are typical of much of Brazil.

Wine tourism is doing well in Brazil, with multi-day tours and one-vineyard trips as the budget allows.

Peru

Just to the north of Chile and Argentina, where the Andes mountains grow even more soaring as they reach up into Peru, there are also several wine-producing areas where visitors can go wine-tasting.

Wine tourism in Peru is in its infancy, but that doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage of a day tour, or organize your own to one of the wineries in the principal grape-growing regions near Lima, Ica and Arequipa.

And if it turns out you don’t love Peruvian wines, near Ica is also the famous region of Pisco, for which the main ingredient in Pisco Sour (Peru’s signature drink) is named.

Venezuela

A trip through all the wine-producers of South America would be remiss in not mentioning, Venezuela, which the uninformed might also assume is too close to the equator to be able to grow wine grapes. Again, altitude is the answer, and the favourable conditions include a greater-than-30 degree daily fluctuation in temperature and good soil drainage.

The area produces two harvests per year, in September and March. Bodegas Pomar, a subsidiary of the conglomerate Polar, which produces beer and other foodstuffs in Venezuela, has spent US$20 million to help develop the Venezuelan wine industry in the last ten years, and represents a hefty chunk of the Venezuelan wine market.

Bodegas Pomar grows six varieties of red grapes and five of white grapes, with hopes to expand the market, to which tourism is essential, because though wine-drinking is increasing in Venezuela, hard alcohol is more commonly drunk.

Bolivia

Bolivia is not exactly world-renowned for its wine, but serious purveyors of the hard-to-find won’t want to miss wines produced in this nation, which dares to grow the fruit at 5,600 to 9,200 feet above sea level, when grapes in South America are normally grown between 2,000 and 3,000 feet.

Information on this wine high-altitude wine production is available on the vinosenlatura website, the name of which means “wines at altitude” in English. Near the municipality of Tarija, you can find wines produced by Campos de Solana, for example, whose offerings include Cabernet Sauvignon and Riesling.

As in Peru, much of the wine crop is destined to the national spirit, which in this case is Singani.

Ecuador

Ecuador actually imports quite a bit of wine from Chile, but it does produce its own as well, with grapes grown at 8,000 feet above sea level, where daytime temperatures are spring-like, and night-time temperatures drop, which increases the grape’s sugar content, and makes for good wine.

At Estancia Chaupi, they produce Chardonnay, Palomino, Palomino Fino and Meritage wines. The vineyard is located about 6 miles south of the Equatorial line and in the foothills of the Andes in the Yaruqui valley. Ecuador also produces a sparkling wine and several fruit “wines” which are not technically wines since they are not made from grapes.

Falklands Veteran Meets The Pilot He Shot Down

January 16th, 2012

As the Argentine jet he shot down plunged to earth in a plume of smoke, Navy gunner Neil Wilkinson was certain the pilot would die.

And the terrifying image from the Falklands War haunted him for the next three decades, leaving him with post-traumatic stress and many a sleepless night.

But 30 years on, the 53-year-old discovered pilot Mariano Velasco safely ejected and survived the strike. And Neil has now had an emotional reunion with the 62-year-old in his homeland. They have even become firm friends.

Dad-of-two Neil said: “I’m so ecstatic. He welcomed me with open arms and that’s all I wanted. It’s too massive to put into words. Part of it is closure really, but meeting him in the flesh I now know he is alive and we are friends.”

Neil, of Leeds, was serving on HMS Intrepid when he blasted Mariano’s Skyhawk fighter jet out of the sky on May 27, 1982 during the conflict with Argentina over the disputed Falklands.

He was only doing his job, but the idea he had killed another human tormented him. He added: “I was seeing this aircraft every day with the black smoke trailing behind. I thought, ‘He’s dead, there’s no way anyone could get out of that’.”

But in 2007 he saw Mariano telling of his ordeal on a TV ­documentary to mark the 25th anniversary of the war. When he described how he was shot down and ejected, Neil knew he must have been his victim from the description of events.

Military record checks confirmed his belief and he set about tracking down Mariano. Neil contacted him by email and after five years of long-distance conversation they met last year.

Their reunion, in the remote Argentinian village where Mariano lives with his family, is to be screened on a BBC Inside Out documentary tonight at 7.30pm as the 30th anniversary of the conflict approaches.

Mariano said: “Good soldiers should be able to forgive each other and afterwards why can’t they be friends?”

Fat Tax For Overweight Passengers?

January 14th, 2012

If a former Qantas group chief economist has his way, airline passengers will soon have another queue to endure when checking in – the queue to be weighed

Tony Webber, now an associate Professor at the University of Sydney Business School, has proposed a controversial ‘weight surcharge’ to help airlines cover rising costs.

Airline costs have increased since 2000 because ‘passengers are carrying a bit more heft’ says Webber, not just because of higher fuel prices. He calculates that the increase in average weight of passengers means 3.72 extra barrels of jet fuel are burnt on the average Sydney to London flight.

This may not seem like much, says Webber, but ‘when you add it up over all flights for a year the extra cost can all but wipe out an airline’s profits.’

While Qantas and Tiger Airlines were quick to state that they had no immediate plans to introduce a ‘fat tax’, KLM and Air France are considering a proposal to force larger passengers to pay for not just one seat, but 75% of the seat next to them as well.

There was no mention of whether extremely thin passengers would be offered the rest of the seat for a quarter of the normal price…

Founder of the Virgin Group, including Virgin Atlantic, Sir Richard Branson was also quiet on the subject, leading some to speculate that a special Virgin airfare/gym membership deal is being offered to help passengers to get in shape before they fly.

What do you think? Should larger passengers have to pay more? Should smaller people get a discount? Or is this just another ludicrous charge on travellers?

Incredible Galapagos Cruise Offers!

January 14th, 2012

If you are thinking of taking a cruise in the Galapagos between now and the end of March, Andean Travel Company have got some mouth-watering offers for you.

They are offering special rates aboard their yachts Galapagos Voyager (www.galapagosvoyageryacht.com) and Galapagos Odyssey (www.galapagosodysseyyacht.com). Please visit the websites for yacht information.

A special new year discount of between US$300 and US$800 is available on the Galapagos Voyager (4, 5 and 8 day trips), and a discount of between US$350 and US$1000 on the Galapagos Odyssey (5, 6, 10, 11 and 15 day trips).

The special rates apply to bookings received before the 30th of March and for travel in January, February and March 2012.

If you have any questions about their yachts or these special offers, please visit www.andeantc.com or contact sales1@andeantc.com

Lionel Messi Awarded Third Ballon d’Or

January 11th, 2012

Lionel Messi has won the Fifa Ballon d’Or prize for the best player of 2011, becoming only the fourth player in history to win the trophy three times.

The Argentine forward, 24, beat Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona team-mate Xavi to the prize.

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson won an award for services to football, while Messi’s boss Pep Guardiola was voted coach of the year.

Access to the Inca Trail

January 11th, 2012

Due to constant rainfall and landslides on the Inca Trail, authorities have decided to limit the access to the campsites number 6, 8, 9 and 17 on the Wiñaywayna Sector. If the landslides continues authorities might also limit the access to Phuyupatamarca, Chaquicoccha and Puente Ruinas with the objective to keep travellers safe. Authorities also recommend that the Intihuatana sector on the northwest zone of Machu Picchu sanctuary shouldn’t be used due to same reasons.

We would like to remind you that the Classic Inca Trail is closed for the whole month of February. This is a regulation imposed by the Peruvian government to allow trail crews to make needed repairs, to pick up any garbage left on the trail, and to allow campsite vegetation to grow again. No one can start the Classic Inca Trail trek on any date from 1 – 28 February.

We support this regulation as it is good for the trail. Additionally, February is in the heart of the rainy season which runs from about mid-November to mid-March, so most travellers won’t be attempting to trek during this time anyway.

If you happen to be in Peru in February, you do have alternatives. The alternative Royal Inca Trail is still open, as are the Lares and Cachiccata hikes. Given the likelihood of rain, you might also consider the shorter, closer-to-comfort Sacred Valley Trek.

Chevron’s Double Trouble

January 11th, 2012

An Ecuadorean appeals court has upheld a ruling that Chevron should pay damages totalling US$18.2bn over Amazon oil pollution. Chevron said the judgement was “illegitimate” and “a fraud.” Texaco, which merged with Chevron in 2001, was accused of dumping toxic materials in the Ecuadorean Amazon. The original ruling ordered Chevron to pay US$8.6bn in damages, which was more than doubled after the company failed to make a public apology.

Wildlife Guiding Internship

January 10th, 2012

This boutique safari lodge is offering a wildlife guiding internship in a pristine part of the southern Pantanal. During the first few weeks of your stay, you will be learning (with the help of experienced guides and trackers) about this unique and rich ecosystem, and about the animals that inhabit the land, rivers and lakes around the lodge. Then, you will assist the guides and trackers on the excursions with the guests. As the lodge is also a small cattle ranch, there will also be the opportunity to learn about the traditional cowboy culture that exists in the Pantanal, and to even assist in the rounding up of cattle by horse.

Important skills that you will be learning: basic 4 × 4 driving in a safari jeep; radio use; using a spotlight for night safaris; horse riding; canoeing; looking after guests; clearing trails and roads used for walks and safari drives with the guests; identifying the tracks of different Pantanal animals; identifying the calls of different Pantanal animals (especially birds); learning about behaviour of the animals; learning about the ecosystem, particularly how the seasonal floods influence the behaviour of the animals; learning about the culture of the Pantanal people.

It is very important that applicants have excellent people skills and enjoy looking after guests. Also, applicants need to have a strong interest in wildlife. Ideally, they would have some background in working with or studying wildlife.

There is no cost to participate and interns receive free board and lodging at the lodge.

Please visit the Volunteer Latin America website to find out how to request further information, including the application procedure.

Mexico Inaugurates World’s Highest Cable-Stayed Bridge

January 10th, 2012

Mexican President Felipe Calderon has inaugurated the world’s highest cable-stayed bridge. The 403m (1,321ft) tall Baluarte bridge spans a deep ravine in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains in the north. It is part of a new highway crossing some of Mexico’s most rugged terrain, from Mazatlan on the Pacific Coast to Durango in the interior. The cable-stayed bridge is so tall that the Eiffel Tower would easily fit under its central span. “This project will unite the people of northern Mexico as never before,” President Calderon said at the inauguration ceremony. Officials from the Guinness World of Records were on hand to present him with an award recognising the engineering feat.

The opening of the 1,124m (3,687ft) long bridge is part of celebrations to mark 200 years of Mexico’s independence from Spain. It is expected to open to traffic later this year, and Mexican officials hope it will boost tourism and commerce in the region. The Mazatlan-Durango highway replaces a notoriously dangerous winding road known as the “Devil’s backbone” that crosses the jagged peaks of the Sierra Madre Occidental. As well as Baluarte, there will be eight other bridges over 300m high, as well as more than 60 tunnels. Officials say it will reduce the journey between Mazatlan and Durango by about six hours. Eventually, it will form part of a modern highway linking the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. As the highest cable-stayed bridge in the world, it surpasses the famous Millau Viaduct in France.

More Young Brits Volunteering Abroad

January 10th, 2012

There has been a significant increase in the number of young Britons applying for volunteer placements overseas in the past year, partly as a result of the difficulties that many have encountered when trying to find a place at university.

Figures from STA, the youth specialist travel agent, show an overall increase of 35 per cent in students booking gap year experiences and a 28 per cent rise in demand for ‘mini-gap’ trips, or ‘snap years’.

A number of factors that have contributed to the strong interest in volunteering abroad, such as the imminent university fee increases in 2012 and the fact that a record number of A-level passes led to some 700,000 students vying for only 480,000 places in higher education last year.

Those who were disappointed in not finding a place at university will come to see it as a blessing in disguise. Volunteering abroad is an excellent way to step off the treadmill of academia and broaden their outlook, life skills and general education, while enriching the lives of others.