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A very fine wine that reflects the very best produced on Rive droite de Bordeaux, here's Château La Gaffelière. Nestled between the Pavie and Ausone hills south of the village of Saint-Emilion, the first traces of this Domaine vineyard date back to Roman antiquity, as evidenced by remains discovered in 1969.
It takes its name from "Gaffets", a term used to describe lepers in the Middle Ages, when Saint-Emilion was home to a leper colony. At that time, most of them carried a stick, the "gaffe", which they used to beg and move around.
For over three centuries now, the estate has been governed by the de Malet-Roquefort family, who continue to develop the terroir with passion and energy, vintage after vintage.
The Château La Gaffelière was named Premier Grand Cru Classé as soon as the Saint-Emilion classification was created in 1955. Thanks to the high reputation of its wines, it will retain this distinction up to and including the 2021 vintage. At the beginning of 2022, Domaine will opt to withdraw from the classification, the next edition of which was due to be made official in September of the same year. Thus, from the 2022 vintage, the label of Château La Gaffelière will mention only the Saint-Emilion appellation Grand Cru.
The Château La Gaffelière has a 22-hectare vineyard with full southern exposure, spread over the three specific terroirs of... See more ...
This 2020 vintage was quite early, with rapid vine growth due to a damp, rainy spring and mild temperatures. This heavy rainfall led to extraordinary mildew pressure, unprecedented in living memory! Until June, exceptional weather conditions made vineyard work difficult.
However, flowering was uniform and took place in good conditions. A hot summer (Sec) accelerated grape ripening. On some of the sandier plots, water stress caused a slight loss of yield, while on the clayier areas, ripening was slowed or even blocked. Harvesting began on September 10
September for the Merlot, a fortnight earlier than in a "normal" year, and still very hot. Rain was slow in coming, arriving only at the end of September, just in time to finish harvesting the last Cabernet Francs.