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A TERROIR WITH CHARACTER
South-west of the city of Tours , the Chinon appellation vineyards are spread over 26 communes in the Indre-et-Loire department, Panzoult being one of them. This appellation area is located mainly on either side of the Vienne river and on a few communes in the Pays de Veron, a region located at the confluence of the Vienne and Loire rivers.
Sloping hillsides, terraces along the Vienne, a few mamelons known as Puys - which have in fact given this name to several localities - the wine-growing landscapes are highly varied. The climate is temperate, with an oceanic influence to the west and a continental influence to the east. Clay-limestone tuff soil with concretioned sands called millarges on the plateau around the town of Chinon.
Thus, the appellation area is determined by a subsoil of Turonian chalk called tuffeau, 50 metres thick in places and several types of soil. Gravel and sand soils along the Vienne and Loire rivers, known as "Varennes" and which have given their name to certain lieux-dits, and clay-limestone tuffeau soils on the hillsides and plateaus overlooking the valleys.
86% of wine production is red, 10% rosé and 5% white.