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May 19-27

McMenamins introduces a new series to their theaters: the Great Northwest Film Tour will screen independent, unreleased films across the Pacific Northwest McMenamins' theater-pubs. It's a chance...

May 22-June 2

View rare and beautiful shells from around the world at the 47th Annual Shell Show, presented by the Oregon Society of Conchologists (OSC) and hosted by OMSI in the featured hallway. Entrance to...

May 22-June 24

Portland Center Stage presents It Ain't Nothin' but the Blues, a stirring retrospective of blues classics that summons the soul of American music. From African chants and Delta spirituals to the...

May 24th

May is Oregon Wine Month! To celebrate, Salty’s on the Columbia is partnering with Willamette Valley Vineyards, one of Oregon’s top wineries and recipient of Wine & Spirits Magazine’s 2011 Winery...

May 25-June 10

It's the city at its very best during the Portland Rose Festival! A packed line-up includes kickoff fireworks (May 25), the Starlight Parade (June 2), the Grand Floral Parade (June 9), Dragon Boat...

Directory

Willamette Valley Wineries Association Featured

Address
PO Box 25162, Portland
Telephone
503.646.2985
E-mail
Website
http://www.willamettewines.com

Come along... to the Willamette Valley, the Heart of Oregon Wine Country!

The Willamette Valley, Oregon's leading wine region has two-thirds of the state's wineries and vineyards and is home to more than 200 wineries. It has been recognized as one of the premier Pinot noir producing areas in the world.

The Willamette Valley is a huge and varied appellation that includes six sub-appellations; Chehalem Mountains, Dundee Hills, Eola-Amity Hills, McMinnville, Ribbon Ridge and Yamhill Carlton.

Buffered from Pacific storms on the west by the Coast Range, the valley follows the Willamette River north to south for more than a hundred miles from the Columbia River near Portland to just south of Eugene. To the east, the Cascade Ranges draws the boundary between the Willamette Valley's misty, cool climate and the drier, more extreme climate of eastern Oregon.

At its widest point, this long, broad valley spans sixty miles. Overall, the climate boasts a long, gentle growing season: warm summers with cool evenings; bursts of Indian summer often shortened by maritime rains; wet, mild winters; and long, often rainy springs. In ideal years the maritime climate provides the best conditions possible for growing the cool-climate grape varieties Oregon is best known for Pinot Noir. In lesser years, fall rains can be tricky and malicious, causing reactions among winemakers ranging from minor hair pulling to outright despair. In this matter the Willamette Valley compares favorably with the Burgundy and Alsace regions of France. And, like it or not, the often finicky Willamette Valley climate is the promised land for Pinot Noir in America. Wineries also produce Pinot gris, Pinot blanc, Chardonnay, Melon, Riesling, Gewurztraminer, sparkling wine, Sauvignon Blanc, and some Cabernet, Merlot and Syrah.

The Willamette Valley wineries are a popular tourist destination with many bed & breakfasts, motels and fine restaurants available. An additional advantage for the wine tourist is the proximity of the wineries to Portland. From Portland, tourists can visit the Willamette Valley winery of their choice in anywhere from 45 minutes to two hours.

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