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Stags Leap District Winegrowers Association

The Region

Textural Hedonism

“When you taste a typical Stags Leap District wine, you understand what all the fuss is about. What's harder to explain is precisely what it is about the soils and climate of Stags Leap that gives its Cabernets such characteristic softness and intensity. Yes, the coarse, eroded soils are, according to reports from UC Davis, unique. Yes, the bare rocks heat up the district quickly during the day. And yes, the heat drops off at night just as rapidly, as cool breezes are sucked in off the Pacific. ... But why this translates to textural hedonism remains a mystery.”
— Karen MacNeil, Cabernet Heaven, Los Angeles Times, 7/8/98

Terroir

A jagged outcropping of sheer rock and the legend of a nimble buck inspired the Stags Leap name over a century ago. The first viticultural area in the United States to be approved based on the distinctiveness of its soils, the district is located in the eastern portion of the Napa Valley, 5 to 7 miles north of the town of Napa and east of the Napa River along the Silverado Trail. Barely a mile wide and three miles long, the district comprises roughly 2,700 acres, of which half are planted to vineyards.

A Valley within a Valley

Often referred to as a "valley within a valley," the district is bounded on the east by the towering Stags Leap Palisades, to the west by the gently rolling hills and the Napa River, to the north by the Yountville Cross Road, and to the south by low-lying flatlands. These landscape features lend the district its clear physical identity.

“There's a sense of entering it and leaving it, and, when inside it, of looking out at the rest of the valley.”
— Rod Smith, Power and Grace, Wine Country Living, July/August 1999

Soil

There is a great diversity of soils within the Stags Leap District but two main types predominate. Soils on the eastern elevation are the result of volcanic eruptions that took place millions of years ago, as well as the slow erosion of the arid Vaca Mountains. In the lowland area, where a much broader Napa River once ran, old river sediments have created a remarkable blend of loams with a clay-like substructure. These gravelly soils, and those of the hillsides, are coarser and retain less water than most resulting in low-vigor vines that yield fruit of great intensity and flavor—the "rock soft" wines of the Stags Leap District.

Climate

The rock facades of the palisades reflect the heat of the sun onto the vineyards below, causing temperatures to rise more quickly than in neighboring vineyards. As afternoon draws to a close, the hills funnel the cool, marine air flowing north from the San Pablo Bay through the Stags Leap District corridor. The cooling effect of this breeze, coupled with nighttime air drainage off the mountains and hills, means lower nighttime temperatures. This allows the grapes to achieve an excellent balance of acid and sugar and also minimizes the threat of frost. The end result is a longer growing season of warm days and cool nights—perfect for late-maturing varietals such as Cabernet.