Rebecca Gibb

freelance drinks journalist

Louis Roederer Emerging Wine Writer of the Year 2010

Argos and its role in Bordeaux tourism

Wednesday 29 July

The word Argos conjures up images of a retail chain with an enormous catalogue and a strange ordering system involving small slips of paper and even smaller pens. However, I ended up on the back of a horse called Argos today in Bordeaux, and it was a million miles from the high street homeware store.

Argos and I ventured through the vineyard of Ch. Rieussec, owned by the Rothschild family, before trotting through LVMH-owned Ch. d’Yquem’s vines and then over the road to Suduiraut. Unfortunately Argos liked to eat constantly so the vines’ canopies are a bit patchy in places now. The horse also had a bit of a wind problem no doubt due to the non-stop munching. Greed and flatulence aside, horse riding through Sauternes turns out to be a great way to see the vineyards and I wholeheartedly recommend it. Check out Ferme Equestre

Not only did I have problems with the horse; the canoeing excursion in Sauternes was equally eventful. I paired up TV chef Dean Simpole-Clarke to paddle down the Cirons – the tributary that meets the Garonne river and is responsible for the famous fog that causes the noble rot essential to make Sauternes. Unfortunately, the canoe had a leak and we ended up sinking slowly. The other boats seemed sturdier and can be hired from the village of Bommes in the heart of the Sauternes region at www.bommes-nautique.new.fr

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