81. Rhône Overview and the Mistral Wind Explained
Description
Wine Educate Newsletter — Your Weekly Wine Study Boost!
If you are studying wine or just love learning, this is your home base for smart, friendly study help. I keep it clear, useful, and welcoming so you actually look forward to it.
Each Tuesday you'll get
-
Level 2 multiple choice questions you can answer in minutes
-
Level 3 essay prompts with simple pointers on where to aim
-
Class news, events, and trip updates
-
Short quizzes and tasting tips to keep skills sharp
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Episode 81 — Rhône Overview and the Mistral Wind Explained
Host: Joanne Close
Focus: A clear overview of the Rhône and a practical explainer on the Mistral wind. This is a Level 3 essential that often appears on exams, and a helpful frame for Level 2 students before you study North and South separately.
What we cover
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Where the Rhône sits
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From just south of Lyon down to the borders with Languedoc and Provence
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Pre-Alps to the east, Massif Central to the west
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Latitude 44–45, similar to Oregon's Willamette Valley
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Production snapshot
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About 75% red, 16% rosé, 9% white
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Roughly 95% of total volume comes from the Southern Rhône
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Appellations you will see
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Côtes du Rhône AOC (1937) applies across North and South, used mostly in the South
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Côtes du Rhône Villages AOC (1960) applies only in the South, with 95 named villages
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North vs South
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Different grapes, climate, soils, and training systems
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Unified by the Rhône River and the Mistral
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The Mistral, simply explained
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What it is
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A cold, dry north wind driven by pressure differences that accelerates down the valley
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How strong it can get
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Often 30–45 mph, gusts can exceed 60 mph
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Recorded at 72 mph on April 6, 2003, just below Category 1 hurricane strength
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When it shows up
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Most common in winter and early spring
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Often arrives with clear blue skies because the air is very dry
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Why it helps and hurts
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Helps: dries leaves and bunches, lowers disease pressure, supports organic viticulture
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Hurts: can shatter flowers at fruit set and reduce yields, can break shoots or damage vines
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How growers adapt
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Northern Rhône
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Choose sites in lateral valleys to reduce exposure
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Steep, terraced, south to southeast aspects for heat and light
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Individual stakes or teepee stakes to anchor Syrah against the wind
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Southern Rhône
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Fewer natural wind breaks, so plant windbreaks and use careful trellising
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Grenache is bush trained low to the ground for protection and soil warmth
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Syrah is more wind sensitive and benefits from strong trellis support
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WSET study angle
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Level 3: be ready to explain the Mistral's cause, timing, benefits, risks, and the training choices that respond to it. Know where Côtes du Rhône and Côtes du Rhône Villages fit on labels.
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Level 2: use this overview to organize your thinking before studying the Northern and Southern Rhône in detail.
Coming next
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A focused episode on the Northern Rhône
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A focused episode on the Southern Rhône
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Newsletter extras for all levels, including a Level 3 essay prompt and Level 2 quizzes for both North and South
Wine Educate Newsletter — Your Weekly Wine Study Boost!
If you are studying wine or just love learning, this is your home base for smart, friendly study help. I keep it clear, useful, and welcoming so you actually look forward to it.
Each Tuesday you'll get
-
Level 2 multiple choice questions you can answer in minutes
-
Level 3 essay prompts with simple pointers on where to aim
-
Class news, events, and trip updates
-
Short quizzes and tasting tips to keep skills sharp
Join us here: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup




