Like Bordeaux itself, our family vineyard has built its history along both banks of the Garonne, across eight generations.
From the Graves to the Entre-Deux-Mers, passing through Sauternes and the slopes of Cadillac, each of our estates carries its own story, its own terroir, and its own character.
Today, the vineyard offers a captivating palette of wines, with aromatic profiles as diverse as they are complementary.

The slopes of the Right Bank :
Cadillac, Côtes de Bordeaux,
Entre-Deux-Mers
The hills of the Left Bank :
Graves, Sauternes
The Garonne river
The Land Forest
The Atlantic Ocean

Known as one of the oldest appellations in Bordeaux, the Graves AOC takes its name from its soil, made up of pebbles and sand, the result of the Garonne’s millennia-old erosion of the Pyrenees.
Highly permeable, this stony composition naturally drains water from the vines. The pebbles, in turn, absorb heat during the day and gently release it back to the vines during the cool autumn nights.
This unique combination encourages the slow ripening of the grapes, allowing the production of fine, complex, and well-balanced wines.
Stretching along a narrow 60 km band, the Cadillac Côtes de Bordeaux region winds its way along the right bank of the Garonne.
The slope and south-southwest exposure of our hillsides bathe the vines in sunlight all day long. The clay-dominant soils retain just the right amount of water to help the vines withstand this generous exposure.
Sun-drenched grapes thus give birth to wines that are ample, warm, and generous.

Flowing for 529 km, the Garonne has been shaping the Bordeaux vineyard for thousands of years. Under its influence, our family estates reveal a multiplicity of terroirs and unfold into a landscape of hills, slopes, and valleys stretching as far as the eye can see.
It is this subtle harmony between nature and soil, exposure, climate, and grape variety that we faithfully express in each of our wines.
Jean & Marc Médeville