
Half a million hectares of vineyard around one elegant city.
Что такое индивидуальный тур в Bordeaux?
A custom Bordeaux tour arranges a private harvest visit to a classified Médoc château in September (watching the grape sorting and the first fermentation), takes the private tour of Pétrus's vineyard in Pomerol with its clay-heavy soil explanation, walks the Saint-Émilion UNESCO hilltop town, and reaches the Arcachon basin for Arcachon oysters eaten on the oyster farm dock. The key is knowing which châteaux accept private visitors and which year's vintage to drink now.
Bordeaux is the world's largest fine wine appellation, the UNESCO city that received a complete 18th-century Enlightenment makeover, and a food culture built on Charolais beef, Arcachon oysters, and the canelé pastry that is simultaneously the simplest and most technically demanding baking challenge in France. A custom Bordeaux tour is structured around the Médoc, Saint-Émilion, and Pomerol châteaux — the names on wine lists everywhere — approached not as a collector's checklist but as an agricultural and architectural story.
The Left Bank and Right Bank are Bordeaux wine's fundamental division: the Médoc and Graves on the Left (Cabernet Sauvignon-dominant, the classified châteaux from the 1855 classification that still governs the market), and Saint-Émilion, Pomerol, and Fronsac on the Right (Merlot-dominant, the Right Bank terroir that produces Pétrus). The city of Bordeaux is between them, on the Garonne. A tour that visits both banks, with the Arcachon basin day on the Atlantic coast, covers the region's full range.
September and October deliver Bordeaux at peak: the grape harvest in full operation at the châteaux, the vineyards changing color, and the finest year-round restaurant season. May through June are also excellent. Tours start at €3,100 per person. The TGV from Paris takes 2 hours.
Рекомендуемые нами месяцы May–June, September–October (harvest). Помесячный обзор с заметками по планированию.
Тщательно отобранные моменты от наших местных операторов. Каждый тур включает часть из них — или что-то ещё лучше.






Два отправных пункта — ваш реальный маршрут создаётся индивидуально. Мы строим отсюда.
September–October is the harvest season — châteaux are accessible, the vineyards are active, and the energy of vintage adds context unavailable at other times. May–June delivers the spring release of recent vintages. The châteaux open for private visits year-round, but many require advance booking — especially the classified growths (First Growths like Haut-Brion require booking months in advance and have waiting lists for private tours). A custom tour handles all château bookings.
At the 1855 Paris World Exposition, Napoleon III commissioned a ranking of Médoc châteaux into five growth levels (Premier Cru through Cinquième Cru) based on the market prices of their wines. The classification has been modified once — in 1973, when Mouton Rothschild was promoted to First Growth. The other 60 châteaux remain exactly where they were placed in 1855. Prices today: First Growths (Haut-Brion, Latour, Margaux, Lafite, Mouton Rothschild) from €400–800+ per bottle en primeur. The classification correlates extremely well with current quality despite 170 years of winemaking change.
Left Bank (Médoc, Graves): gravel-and-sand soils draining quickly to the Gironde estuary, favoring Cabernet Sauvignon which needs this drainage to ripen fully. The wines are typically more tannic when young, age longer, and develop the 'pencil shaving and cedar' complexity of aged Bordeaux. Right Bank (Saint-Émilion, Pomerol): clay and limestone soils retaining more water, favoring Merlot which ripens more easily in cool conditions. The wines are rounder, richer, and approachable younger. Pétrus and Le Pin (Merlot on clay) are the most extreme expression of Right Bank terroir.
Pétrus is privately owned by the Mouiex family and does not conduct public tastings or château visits. Private visits are arranged through négociants, fine wine merchants, or tour operators with direct relationships with the property — which is genuinely small (11 hectares, 30,000 bottles per year) and has no visitor infrastructure to accommodate anyone. A custom tour arranges a vineyard visit and tasting through established relationships. Expect significant lead time and cost.
Bordeaux's food culture: entrecôte à la Bordelaise (Charolais beef with shallot, marrow, and red wine sauce), Arcachon oysters (eaten with grilled sausages and chilled Muscadet — the Bordeaux way), cèpes (porcini mushrooms from the Landes pine forests, sautéed in duck fat), lamproie à la Bordelaise (lamprey eel braised in red wine — a medieval Gascon recipe), and the canelé (the rum-and-vanilla custard pastry in a copper mold). The market at Marché des Capucins is the best food shopping in Bordeaux.
Поговорите с нашим AI-консьержем — двух минут достаточно, чтобы описать идеальное путешествие.