Bordeaux 2017 – harvest and weather report
Posted by Gavin Quinney on 3rd Nov 2017
This looong newsletter isn’t up everyone’s alley, to be fair, and you’d be forgiven for flicking to the next email in a trice. In the grand scheme of things, the 2017 Bordeaux vintage matters little, and yet, it is a quite extraordinary year: a shortfall of almost 350 million bottles compared to last year (who knew Bordeaux even made that many?), while 80% of the top 150 châteaux were largely untouched.
Click here if you’d rather link straight through to Gavin's blog post (where you'll find a description of each photo, for example). The piece is also published today on Jancis Robinson’s wine site and by Livex, the fine wine exchange.
All the best
Gavin & Angela
Bordeaux 2017 – harvest and weather report
Bordeaux 2017 will go down as the year of the frost. But now that the harvest is complete, it’s clear that this really is a vintage of haves, have-nots and somewhere-in-betweens. For those growers and châteaux with vineyards that weren’t hit, there has been every chance of making very good wine. Here is a look at how the weather stamped an indelible mark on the vintage, along with numerous images of the harvest.
Contents and highlights
Introduction – a small crop
45% down on last year due to April frost
The growing season
Pretty good – rain end of June, dry summer, hot August, damp start to September, fine finish
The harvest – a view from the top
80% of top wines from 150 leading châteaux not impacted by frost
The harvest – Left Bank
A good year for Pauillac, St-Julien, St-Estèphe
The harvest – Right Bank
A year of contrasts, in photos
The harvest – AC Bordeaux appellations
Mixed bag, an early harvest
Opinion – ‘très hétérogène’
A good, bad and ugly year
Opinion – a note on prices
Bulk prices up, not so for top wines
The en primeur tastings
Second not first week of April 2018
Appendix
The weather charts
Comparisons with previous years
Frost map of Bordeaux 2017
Introduction – a small crop
The most obvious point about Bordeaux 2017 is that production overall is down a staggering 40-50%: the late Spring frost – primarily the one in the early hours of 27 April – severely damaged the young buds, shoots and tiny unformed bunches at the very start of the growing season.
Volumes are expected to be 40% lower than the 10-year average and 45% down on 2016 (320 million litres in 2017, down from 530 million average and 577 million litres in 2016). In bottle terms, 2017 is heading for a shortfall of 340 million compared with last year.
Bordeaux hasn’t experienced anything like this level of frost damage since 1991.
The losses are by no means evenly distributed, so everyone has had different challenges and opportunities: some growers and châteaux lost their entire potential crop for the year; some, like us, around half; others suffered no losses at all.
This month, every grower or producer is required to submit their déclaration de récolte, or crop declaration, and it won’t be a joyful exercise for many. The figures for each appellation will be published in February. Some areas fared much better than others – in May, I created an exciting frost map of Bordeaux 2017 which you can find in the appendix at the foot of the page.
The growing season
It’s not just about the frost. I’ve put together the daily temperature and rainfall statistics for 2017 from six different regions across Bordeaux.
After an early bud break, 2017 was always likely to see an early harvest, despite the Spring frost.
The flowering began in mid-May and was not affected by the heavy rain at the end of June (the week after the blistering heat of Vinexpo).
July was mixed – sometimes sunny but often cloudy and mild. Veraison, when the grapes change colour, began relatively early. We then enjoyed a fairly hot and dry August.
Rain during the first half of September was initially welcome after the hot patch but when it carried on, along with the falling temperatures, there was serious concern in the build up to the red harvest. Thankfully, the sun came out for the second half of the month and the threat of rot or dilution receded. Most châteaux completed the harvest in September, while others waited for their Cabernets a little longer.
2017 was a dry vintage when taking into account the 12-month cycle; we had around 700mm of rain for the year, compared to a 30-year average of over 900mm. There was a similar amount of rain from March to September as the 30-year average.
Comparing 2017 with other years, June and September were wetter than the average, while July and August were drier. As we saw above though, the heavy rain at the end of June had minimal impact on the flowering.
There are more fascinating weather charts and observations in the appendix below.
The harvest – a view from the top
Now to turn to some impressions of the harvest around Bordeaux.
For enthusiasts, buyers and collectors of fine wine, it’s first worth noting that 80% of the top 150 châteaux enjoyed a good harvest; there was minimal damage to the plots which provide the grapes for their first wine or ‘grand vin’. So, at the top end, there should be reasonable volumes, and good quality, from many of the blue chip names.
A good number of the top 150 châteaux are in Pauillac, St-Julien and St-Estèphe, and their vineyards, profiting from the benign influence of the Gironde estuary alongside, were mostly unaffected. Further south on the Left Bank, although Margaux, Pessac-Léognan and Sauternes saw some serious frost damage, the best parcels for most of the top names survived intact.
On the Right Bank, St-Emilion suffered terribly as a whole but many of the top estates, especially those with elevated vineyards, had far less damage than those on the plains below. The same was true for the top vineyards on the plateau of Pomerol.
Though these seven famous appellations make up just 13% of the total area of Bordeaux (14,300 hectares out of 110,000 in all, and St-Emilion accounts for almost half of these), they are home to nearly all of the most famous names.
The harvest – Left Bank
Frost? What frost? The vintage looks very promising for the key appellations of Pauillac, St-Estèphe and St-Julien. With one or two exceptions, these were generally untouched by the frost.
The Cabernet Sauvignon looks especially good and although many châteaux completed their harvest in late September, the fine weather in the last fortnight of the month gave châteaux the opportunity to hang on until the first week of October if needed.
Château Lagrange in St-Julien was one of the few Grands Crus Classés in the northern end of the Haut-Médoc to have suffered some serious frost damage. It is no coincidence that of all the St-Julien Crus Classés, it’s the furthest inland from the estuary. Just across the appellation boundary, the Crus Classés of the Haut-Médoc – Châteaux Belgrave, de Camensac and La Tour Carnet, were all hit.
Further south down the D2, parts of Margaux were hit by the frost but many of the leading estates got off lightly. Nearby areas of the Haut-Médoc were hit here too, as were large swathes of Moulis and Listrac. (There was also some damage in the Médoc appellation to the north, in areas lying inland from the estuary.)
South of the city of Bordeaux, it was a mixed vintage for Péssac-Léognan and the Graves, with fine harvest conditions for those parcels that weren’t damaged.
Part of the Graves suffered a double whammy. There was a localised hail storm on Sunday 27 August near Podensac, which carried across the Garonne river into the Cadillac Côtes de Bordeaux region around Paillet. This was bad news for properties like Château Chantegrive, which had already been badly hit by the April frost. (But to put the hail damage here in the same headline as the devastation from the frost is a misrepresentation. The frost cost Bordeaux hundreds of millions of bottles – the hail just tens of thousands.)
Harvest conditions for the sweet white wines of Sauternes were also really encouraging, although I haven’t been down there since the summer. Lower lying vineyards there had been hit by the frost, and parts of Barsac were severely damaged.
The harvest – Right Bank
Throughout the 2017 growing season and during the harvest, nowhere demonstrated the contrast between the vineyards that were damaged by the frost, and the vineyards that weren’t, more than St-Emilion.
This large region of over 6,300 hectares – the appellation is bigger than Margaux, St-Julien, Pauillac and St-Estèphe combined – has numerous differing terroirs and varying landscapes. In 2017, both St-Emilion and its satellites, notably Montagne-St-Emilion, saw some of the worst of the frost damage. Prestigious properties weren’t spared either, and several Grand Crus Classés suffered considerable losses of up to 100%.
Certainly the leading vineyards on the limestone slopes and the plateau surrounding the town itself fared well, with absolutely minimal damage. Touring around these vineyards in August, from Château Canon across to Château Troplong Mondot, above, you’d be forgiven for thinking that St-Emilion was enjoying a bumper crop.
In other parts though, not least down on the valley floor, the full force of the frost had been felt. And yet some parcels were hit, while others weren’t. The way the frost had swept through some vineyards but not others was almost biblical.
Here’s one example of two parcels, side-by-side. You can see the same buildings in the distance. These pictures were taken a week after the frost on 4 May. One block suffered 100% loss, the other almost no loss at all.
There were also some really sad views of Saint Emilion vineyards on the other side of town, out towards the border with Pomerol. Although a number of parcels of the famous estates of Figeac and Cheval Blanc were hit, many of their neighbours were punished much more severely. We’ll see very little wine from the Grands Crus Classés in the Corbin sector, for example.
Pomerol was also damaged in the lower areas of the appellation but the most famous vineyards up on the plateau fared much better. There should be excellent wines from St-Emilion and Pomerol being shown to the trade and the press next April, while their bereft neighbours look on stoically.
The less celebrated appellations of the Right Bank, including Lalande de Pomerol, Fronsac and the St-Emilion satellites, took quite a battering in the frost. But harvest conditions were otherwise good for those with vineyards that survived intact.
It’s a similar story here and across the Bordeaux: some blocks produced nothing or very little, while the partially hit zones offered up bunches of varying levels of ripeness with the resulting wines showing mixed or debatable qualities; but there’s some terrific quality from plots untouched by the frost.
The harvest – AC Bordeaux appellations
The engine room of Bordeaux in volume terms, accounting for almost half of production, is generic AOP/AC Bordeaux and Bordeaux Supérieur and this comes mostly from the Entre Deux Mers region and north of Libourne. The losses are in line with the general picture of 40%, and quality is, unsurprisingly, extremely variable.
Many producers turned to thermo-vinification, whereby the must is heated to very high temperatures pre-fermentation in order to eliminate green or vegetal characters, and to end up with a straightforward, supple style of wine for short term drinking.
Opinion – ‘très hétérogène’
It is, without doubt, a year of mixed fortunes. In Bordeaux, you get used to the qualities of a vintage being described as either homogène – such as in 2010 or 2016 – or hétérogène. 2017 will probably the most hétérogène of the lot.
The vintage can already be broken down into:
- Those that weren’t hit by the frost. They should be fine – 2017 is potentially a very good vintage. It’s not a blockbuster year but the tannins and the fruit were ripe and we should see wines at the same quality level as 2012 (an under-rated year in my book) or perhaps 2014. (Some up north on the Left Bank are even mentioning 2015… .)
- Those who had some parcels that were hit. The second generation bunches that formed after the frost may just have ripened in time for a secondary crop but I can’t see these making anything more than second wines. (We made ours into rosé.) I’ve repeated the word ‘second’ intentionally. Selection is key – not just in the sorting but in the blends for the final wine. One can debate whether pickers know which bunch to pick and which to reject.
- Those that lost almost everything. The work, though, didn’t stop as growers had to treat their vines with almost equal care, even if just to preserve the following year’s crop.
Many people have asked if next year’s crop is affected too. While this was a major concern in May when the severity of the frost damage could be seen close up, most vineyards have recovered sufficiently for there to be adequate growth to prune over the coming winter for the 2018 season. After the frost of 1991, 1992 saw a large crop. The only problem being it wasn’t a very good one.
Opinion – a note on prices
Wholesale prices for bulk wines are already up around 20% and demand will outstrip supply for any 2017 bulk wines of quality. En primeur prices next year for wines from leading châteaux are surely unlikely to follow suit, however, on the back of the chunky increases for the 2015 and 2016 vintages – regardless of critics and the trade being enthused by the wines next Spring.
It’s sensible to consider Bordeaux bulk prices – typically around €1.55 a litre, or €1400 a tonneau, for good AC Bordeaux – and the ‘en primeur’ prices for top châteaux as two very different markets.
The En Primeur Tastings
I actually think it will be a fascinating vintage to taste next Spring. Usually the trade and press tastings in Bordeaux take place during the first week of April, but Easter 2018 falls on 1 April. So the Union des Grands Crus en primeur week is set for 9 – 12 April 2018.
Appendix
Comparing 2017 with previous vintages
Here is how 2017 compares to 2016, which is generally accepted as being a great year.
2016 was characterised by a wet spring, then a long, hot, dry summer (12 weeks of almost no rain) before a storm on 13 September brought much needed refreshment to the vines shortly before the harvest. The harvest period was cool, dry and sunny – and a little later than usual.
2017 saw heavy rain at the end of June, then small amounts of intermittent rain during July and August. Almost two weeks of cool, damp weather from the start of September threatened to throw the vintage completely off course, but good weather returned for the last fortnight of the month. Most grapes were picked in September, which is earlier than the norm.
As you can see from the activity in the vineyards in the two charts above, 2017 was always ahead of 2016.
From the pictures of a block of Merlot vines at Château Bauduc below, all taken on the same day on 23 May each year, you can see that 2017 was ahead of all other vintages except the very early year of 2011.
There were also some really sad views of Saint Emilion vineyards on the other side of town, out towards the border with Pomerol. Although a number of parcels of the famous estates of Figeac and Cheval Blanc were hit, many of their neighbours were punished much more severely. We’ll see very little wine from the Grands Crus Classés in the Corbin sector, for example.
Pomerol was also damaged in the lower areas of the appellation but the most famous vineyards up on the plateau fared much better. There should be excellent wines from St-Emilion and Pomerol being shown to the trade and the press next April, while their bereft neighbours look on stoically.
2017 was, in fact, a dry vintage when taking into account the 12-month cycle. Taking the figures from six key regions, we had 712mm of rain for the year, 23% less than the 30 year average of 928mm. There was considerably less rain than the norm in January, February and April.
The rainfall was quite consistent from one region to another in 2017.
Total rainfall though from March to September 2017 was similar to the 30-year average: June and September were wetter, while July and August were drier.
Every recent vintage, barring 2017, has seen a drier September than the average over 30 years.
Frost map of Bordeaux 2017
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