Photographer’s Note
Some well maintained flower beds in the small wine village of Sauternes in the département of the Gironde in South-West France.
Some information taken from a longer article on Wikipedea about Sauternes wine:
Sauternes is a French dessert wine from the Sauternais region of the Graves section in Bordeaux. Sauternes is made from Sémillon, Sauvignon Blanc, and Muscadelle grapes that have been affected by Botrytis cinerea, also known as noble rot. This causes the grapes to become partially raisined, resulting in concentrated and distinctively flavoured wines. Sauternes is one of the few wine regions where infection with noble rot is a frequent occurrence, due to its climate. Even so, production is a hit-or-miss proposition, with widely varying harvests from vintage to vintage. Wines from Sauternes, especially the Premier Cru Supérieur estate Château d'Yquem, can be very expensive, due largely to the very high cost of production. Barsac lies within Sauternes, and is entitled to use either name.
As in most of France, viticulture is believed to have been introduced into Aquitania by the Romans. The earliest evidence of sweet wine production, however, dates only to the 17th century. While the English were Bordeaux's main consumer since the Middle Ages, their primary tastes were for red claret. It was the Dutch traders of the 17th century who first developed an interest in white wine. For years they were active in the trade of German wines but production in Germany began to wane in the 17th century as the popularity of Beer increased. The Dutch saw an opportunity for a new production source in Bordeaux and began investing in the planting of white grape varieties. They introduced to the region German white wine making techniques, such as halting fermentation with the use of sulphur in order to maintain residual sugar levels. One of these techniques involved taking a candle (known as a "brimstone candle") with its wick dipped in the sulphur and burned in the barrel that the wine will be fermenting in. This would leave a presence of sulphur in the barrel that the wine would slowly interact with as it was fermenting. Being an anti-microbial agent, sulphur stuns the yeasts that stimulates fermentation, eventually bring it to a halt with high levels of sugars still in the wine. The Dutch began to identify areas that could produce grapes well suited for white wine production and soon honed in on the area of Sauternes. The wine produced from this area was known as vins liquoreux but it is not clear if the Dutch were actively using nobly rotted grapes at this point.
Critiques | Translate
meltemi
(9746) 2009-03-01 0:44
Hello Stephen,
beautiful and elegant result in this one. The play of flower color in this path is nicely rendered in a warming atmosphere, despite the turbulent sky. Good work again.
All the best.
Stella
ChrisJ
(70443) 2009-03-01 0:51
Hi Stephen
Good linear perspective of the garden bed with superb repetition & symmetry of the benches & flagpoles / flags. Good sharpness & colour. Tfs!
jlbrthnn
(38867) 2009-03-01 3:30
Bonjour Stephen,
Il faisait un temps gris et c'est dommage pour les couleurs de ce beau parterre. Toutefois, les couleurs des fleurs et drapeaux sont quand même joliment présentes. le ciel gris fait ressortir la couleur verte. L'architecture basse est agréable à découvrir. Un bon travail et une bonne note.
Bon dimanche
Cordialement
Joël
diomed
(4587) 2009-03-01 4:51
Hi Stephen,
what a nice symmetric perpective with amazing colours and quiet, peacefull atmosphere! Congratulations
Nice sunday
Antonio
Fis2
(46341) 2009-03-01 5:29
Czesc Stephen!
Very interesting frame.
Super perspective and symmetry.I like the nice colors.
Good work.
Regards
Krzysztof
trekks
(14334) 2009-03-01 9:09
hi Stephen
The symmetry you have chosen is well done for this presentation of the bed of flowers leading up to the building, with even the flags/benches also in symmetry. The composition is a key element of this POV. Good work.
tfs, bill
carper
(65598) 2009-03-01 9:12
very nice one Stephen,
good perspective here,
well taken shot, good composition, good note fine trek earth photo job, have a nice evening.
regard jaap
jurek1951
(26110) 2009-03-01 10:00
Hi Stephen,
Nice composition and very good point of view. Excellent light and sharpness.
Georg
Nicou
(45639) 2009-03-01 10:33
Hello,
Magnifique ce par-terreu fleuri, quel perspective et cadrage, une rechers splendide, avec les quatre bancs, el bâtiment, vraiment superbe.
Bravo et amitié
Nicou
chinchini
(27789) 2009-03-01 13:03
Salut Stephen,
J'aurais mieux vu une image d'un château, domaine ou vignoble pour accompagner ta bonne note sur un de nos meilleurs vins ;o)
Mais ce long parterre de rosiers en fleurs est très beau. Il apporte une grande profondeur et nous conduit à une construction qui me semble intéressante à découvrir.
Ciao mon Ami
Pierre
jaywalker
(12302) 2009-03-01 13:10
Hi Stephen, A brilliant view up the long carpet of flowers, lovely colours & great symmetry, the vertical framing is superb & flags are a wonderful asset, TFS, kind regards Wilson.
Flavia
(10202) 2009-03-02 7:54
Hi Stephen,
Nice composition using the flower path to lead the eyes. The light was not present but you did the best of the weather conditions you had.
Regards,
Flavia
dareco
(17104) 2009-04-05 22:09
I keep jumping back in your gallery because I missed so many very nice pictures. These flowers are lovely, as are the colors. Also the architecture. Very nice pov. TFS
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Stephen Nunney (snunney)
(35436) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2008-06-00
- Categories: Nature, Architecture
- Camera: CANON EOS 10 D, Canon 28-80 3,5-4,8 USM IV
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2009-03-01 0:32








