Most Relaxing Vacations: Mendocino Wineries


Mendocino wineries consume California-grown grapes into fine wine varietals. The Medocino County is the biggest region found in California and also delights in a vineyard-friendly climate. Being separated by the Medocino range, this wine region thrives in being subjected to 2 climatic zones. Medocino is the wine center of California, wherein in grapes are grown and harvested organically. At least of all vineyards found there adhere to this practice as well, making Medocino the chief promoter of organic farming. Due to this fact alone, writers and reporters flock to this area to learn more about it.

The vision of Toulouse Vineyard is to be the pioneer in growing grapes of the highest quality by adopting sustainable farming techniques and practices. The winery aims at producing the finest form of Pinot Noir, through infusion of passion and fun of making wine. For its current owners, Maxine and Vern Boltz, theirs has been a journey of great excitement, first starting out as growers of fruits before becoming part of Mendocino Wineries. They pride themselves in production of hand crafted wine and due to their small scale production; they are able to ensure that their production is always at its best quality possible.

For Pinot Noirs, try Goldeneye Winery. Goldeneye Winery has been forever determined to take the top spot as Pinot Noir wine producers. It can be found along the migration route of the Goldeneye duck and Anderson Valley and has been renowned by wine critics as well as wine lovers all over the world. Some of their wines arte the 2011 Goldeneye Anderson valley Vin Gris, the 2010 Goldeneye Anderson valley Pinot Noir and others.

Looking for quaint, try Husch Vineyards Winery. If you are coming from San Francisco in Northern California, it would only take you about a couple of hours drive to get to the Husch Vineyards Winery. Although modest in size, it certainly makes it up in its experience and long-standing presence in the wine industry. Located in the Anderson valley appellation, the vineyard is operated by the Husch family. Now in the hands of the third generation of Husches, The winery generate a set of 22 diverse wine blends and notably, 6 of them are made available nationwide. They are very meticulous and careful in developing their wine that passes the world standards and visitors can get a taste of this in their tasting room. Ever since then, they never failed to deliver the best quality of wine to their guests.

If you would like to see some wonderful sights, road trips and drinking champagne, then Roederer Estate Winery should be your number one stop. Every moment spent there is worth your while with their spacious wine tasting room. Even though the Anderson wine valley is smaller compared to other wine counties, every guest there is promised to have the best time.

Esterlina Vineyard makes amazing Merlots! Maintained and supervised by top wine makers Lyn Krausmann and Erick Sterling, Esterlina Vineyards & Winery has definitely earned it spot in Mendocino Wineries. They have an assortment of wine drink that includes Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay, Zinfadel, Pinot Noir and Riesling.



Rose Festival: a guide to celebrating Morocco’s flower festival


Morocco Rose Festival: the land of red and pink

Gabriella Le Breton visits a remote region of Morocco where the roses for most of the world’s perfumes are grown.

Morocco Rose Festival: the land of red and pink
"Located about six hours' drive south-east of Marrakesh, Morocco's 'Valley of Roses' is as lush and fragrant as it sounds" 
The views across the valley from the flat-roofed Berber house were sublime. A meandering trail of varied hues of green flanked the M’Goun wadi, its river rendered invisible by a dense patchwork of palms, olive and fig trees, purple field gladiolus, pink roses and swathes of red poppies. The ochre turrets of kasbahs in a remote village rose from the green, dwarfed by towering copper mesas behind them, with the snow-capped Atlas Mountains in the background.
Sarah, clearly accustomed to her spectacular surroundings, unceremoniously dumped a hessian bag full of pink rose buds on the sun-baked roof and spread them evenly among hundreds of others, before turning to watch me admiring the view.
Sarah is one of several young locals who help at Hdida’s Kasbah des Roses co-operative, sifting tight Damask rose buds from the pounds of blowsy pink petals harvested by local families in this small Moroccan village. The buds are dried for use in cosmetics, home decoration and cooking, while the petals are distilled into rose water and, ultimately, rose oil, a key ingredient in many of the world’s perfumes and potions.
Located about six hours’ drive south-east of Marrakesh, Morocco’s “Valley of Roses” is as lush and fragrant as it sounds. While the labyrinthine medinas of Marrakesh, Fes and Casablanca are known the world over, few visitors to Morocco venture here, to the province of Ouarzazate (pronounced “Wazazat”). Unless they’re film stars that is, as Ouarzazate is Africa’s Hollywood – the desert setting for countless films including Lawrence of Arabia, Gladiator, Babel and Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.
Indeed, I wouldn’t have come to Ouarzazate had it not been for an encounter with perfumer Linda Pilkington. The founder of London’s opulent Ormonde Jayne perfumery, Linda scours the globe for rare ingredients with which to blend her exotic scents, tracking down small-scale producers of black irises in Jordan, heady champaca flowers in India’s Indus Valley – and sweet-smelling roses in Morocco. Inspired by Pilkington’s tales of rose-hunting in the Atlas and the region’s intriguing-sounding Rose Festival, which takes place early each May in the “capital” of the Valley of Roses, El Kelaa M’Gouna, I had booked my flight to Ouarzazate.
Photo: Ian Cumming
Given my horticultural intentions for the trip, I had been thrilled to discover that the celebrated French garden designer Louis Benech (whose projects include the gardens of Versailles Palace, Paris’s Élysée Gardens and Pavlovsk’s rose pavilion in St Petersburg) had created the gardens of Dar Ahlam Kasbah, a nine-suite, three-villa hotel squirrelled away in the palmerie of Skoura, a village in the “Valley of 1,000 Kasbahs”, between Ouarzazate and the Valley of Roses. Exploring the grounds was a delight: 500-year-old olive trees shaded lines of irises, a small rose garden was a riot of colour and scent, ancient palm trees swayed gently above the large pool, and burbling streams watered a herb garden.
Meals are served whenever guests wish at Dar Ahlam, in varied, secluded and impossibly picturesque locations – breakfast might be taken at a petal-strewn table by the pool, lunch enjoyed while reclining on day beds under the dappled light of an olive grove, and dinner savoured à deux in a courtyard garden, lit by countless candles.
Wrenching myself from this idyll, I went in search of the Rose Festival. Driving through flat, arid desert, it was hard to imagine I was about to discover the seas of Persian roses described by Pilkington. However, as I approached El Kelaa M’Gouna, named after the river that feeds the Valley of Roses, the road became flanked by rose-studded hedgerows and children selling heart-shaped decorations and garlands fashioned from rose petals.
Photo: Ian Cumming
El Kelaa M’Gouna itself was humming with excitement and brimming with people. Dating from the late Thirties, when the French opened the valley’s first distilleries, the festival celebrates the annual harvest with exuberant displays of Berber singing, dancing and sword-fighting, along with the coronation of a Rose Queen in a packed open-air stadium.
The streets of the town were equally busy, with hundreds of stalls selling everything from babouche slippers and silver jewellery to saffron and ice cream served in bright green, pink or orange cones. It had the air of a village fete, albeit a rather chaotic one, with men strolling around with roses tucked behind their ears and women wearing rose garlands on their heads. Although few of the street vendors were selling rose products, a dozen permanent “Boutiques des Roses” offered a dazzling array of violently pink soaps, gels, creams, sprays and oils, and mountains of dried rose buds.
Abandoning the festival, I drove deeper into the Valley of Roses to find the Kasbah des Roses co-operative, to learn about the work involved in creating the highly valuable rose oil (a teaspoon of pure rose oil costs about £70) using the traditional method of steam distillation.
Having watched Sarah fork through a vast heap of freshly harvested rose petals, separating the petals intended for distillation, I followed the maze of paths that linked the small squares of roses, gladiolus and poppies that carpet the M’Goun wadi. Pilkington was spot on with her description of Morocco’s Damask roses as “really rather scruffy and frayed around the edges” – much like sweeter-smelling old English roses, they were endearingly shabby.
All too soon, my time in Ouarzazate’s valleys of roses, kasbahs, olive groves and orange trees was over. Keen to enjoy a couple of days in Marrakesh before returning home, I embarked on the scenic, 125-mile drive there, passing barren desert, sleepy Berber villages and grazing camels and navigating the switchbacks of the spectacular Tichka Pass into lavender-lined gorges and fertile terraced hills.
Upon arrival in the city, I retreated to that most iconic of North African hotels, La Mamounia. Sipping a glass of mint tea in the Menzeh folly, in the tranquillity of the hotel’s 20-acre gardens, I caught the scent of delicate white and pink roses, rambling up the gnarled trunks of 700-year-old olives.
I found myself thinking of Pilkington, who stayed here 10 years ago, flushed with success after tracking down a rose-oil producer for her new scent, Tolu. To travel the world hunting rare flowers, spices, seeds and berries, and to bottle those scents for others to savour, is a rare and enviable skill.
And one I’ll have to rely on now, by inhaling a spritz of Tolu, to whisk me back to the fragrant foothills of the Atlas Mountains.

Getting there

Royal Air Maroc (royalairmaroc.com) offers return London-to-Marrakesh flights from £280 and to Ouarzazate, via Casablanca, from £255.
This year’s Rose Festival runs from May 8-10.
For more information about travelling to Morocco, contact the Moroccan National Tourist Office (020 7437 0073; visitmorocco.com).

Packages

Mr & Mrs Smith (0845 034 0700; mrandmrssmith.com) can create a bespoke Moroccan itinerary. A three-night stay in a double room at Dar Ahlam for two people (including full board, transfers and excursions), plus two nights at La Mamounia, costs from £2,975.

The inside track

Dar Ahlam Kasbah arranges Ouarzazate airport transfers and will provide a driver for excursions. However, if you need a driver to or from Marrakesh, Hicham Bachar (00212 667 236718; h.bachartour@gmail.com) is good, and also offers 4WD desert excursions.
If you suffer from car sickness, bring something for the spectacular but winding drive between Ouarzazate and Marrakesh.
Visit the Aït Benhaddou Kasbah while you’re in Ouarzazate. The fortified 17th-century “ksar” is one of southern Morocco’s finest examples of traditional pre-Saharan earthen construction techniques.
Stock up on spices, Berber mint tea, saffron and amber (a fragrant moth deterrent) in Marrakesh at a herboriste, or Berber pharmacy, on Rahba Kedima square.
Stroll Marrakesh’s Jardin Majorelle, the Mamounia gardens, the rose gardens of Koutoubia Mosque and Menara gardens.

The best hotels

Kasbah des Roses, Hdida £
This basic, seven-bedroom property is in Hdida, about 10 miles from El Kelaa M’Gouna, and offers an authentic Berber family-hosted experience (00212 661 935025;kasbahdesroses.com; from £18 per person per night half board and £21 per person per night full board).
La Mamounia, Marrakesh (pictured above) £££
This is one of the world’s most iconic hotels, and the preferred haunt of Winston Churchill for good reason: La Mamounia is the ultimate sanctuary from Marrakesh’s busy medina, with its tranquil gardens, attentive staff, sumptuous rooms, divine spa and superb (Michelin-starred) restaurants (524 388600; mamounia.com; doubles from £456 per night).
Dar Ahlam Kasbah, Skoura £££
A beautifully renovated and extended kasbah in the heart of the Skoura palmerie. With nine suites and three villas, this is boutique luxury at its best, with all meals, house wines, airport transfers and excursions part of the exemplary and discreet service (mrandmrssmith.com; 0845 034 0700; all-inclusive double rooms from £695).

The best restaurants

Café Snack Rahba Kedima, Marrakesh £
Rooftop cafés abound in Marrakesh but this one boasts particularly attentive service, tasty food, views over the spice market square from the second floor and sweeping views of the medina and Atlas Mountains from the top terrace (Rahba Kedima 168; 661 165228).
Bleu d’Orange, Marrakesh ££
The exuberant passion and talent of young Italian chef Francesco Montano has placed this restaurant on Marrakesh’s hot list. Montano sources local produce with which to create dishes that combine the best of Moroccan and Italian flavours, such as seafood ravioli with mint and zucchini and Milanese osso bucco with saffron risotto (Four Seasons Hotel, 1 boulevard de la Menara; 524 359200).
Le Marocain at La Mamounia, Marrakesh £££
Tucked away in its own riad in La Mamounia’s gardens, Le Marocain offers a wide selection of traditional local dishes, served on a balmy terrace or surrounded by the mosaics and fountains of the ground floor. Go for the five-course menu traditionnel for a feast of Moroccan flavours
In the dry folds of the High Atlas mountains, approaching the Sahara, there’s an unexpected place called the Vallée des Roses where, in spring, the entire area is awash with pink Persian roses. In the small town of El-Kelaâ M’Gouna, roses nestle among hedgerows so that they’re not immediately visible, but they are the town’s lifeblood, from their cultivation through to the production of rosewater.

The flowers are harvested in mid-May, an event celebrated in the colourful and sweet-smelling Rose Festival, which draws around 20,000 people to the small town. The three-day festival is a time of song and dance, feasting, souk-like markets and a chariot procession through a shower of rose petals. There’s also a beauty pageant of sorts, with a Miss Rose crowned each year.

Essentials: there is only a handful of hotels in El-Kelaâ M’Gouna, so you may need to stay in Skoura or Ouarzazate, and travel up the Dades Valley for the festival.

Local attractions: the rosewater factories in town are open for tours, and you can buy almost any rose product, from cream and soap to rosewater, in a number of shops (beware of synthetic products made in Casablanca). If you have your own transport, head out into the Vallée des Roses, where the walking is excellent in spring.A Year of FestivalsLonely Planet Travel guide 2008-08-01 James Bainbridge, Marika McAdam, Lonely Planet Publications, Andrew Bain Aug 2008
A Year of FestivalsA guide to having the time of your life! A Year of Festivals takes you around the world in pursuit of festivals in all their flamboyant colour and variety. Discover music, camel races, feats of endurance, manic street parties and monumental food fights!
From the sublime (Venice's Carnevale or India's Krishna Janmastami) to the absurd (Finland's Wife-Carrying Championships or Australia's Beer Can Regatta) - the best of the famous and little-known alike are represented here. Be inspired and plan a year to remember!

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