Hey, Willamette Valley, prepare to make room on your Pinot Noir stage for Southern Oregon. They are ready for their close-up. The Southern Oregon American Viticultural Area (AVA) encompasses Applegate Valley, Elkton Oregon, Red Hill Douglas County, Rogue Valley and Umpqua Valley. The AVA’s two million total acres stretch from south of Eugene to within wine-spitting distance of the California border. Those who picture the Southern Oregon AVA as a warm-climate region filled with fly fishing, Tempranillo and Syrah would be surprised to discover that Pinot Noir is the region’s most widely planted grape, accounting for over 40% of the planted acreage, according to the 2022 Oregon Vineyard and Winery Report. You May Also Like: The Best Willamette Valley Pinot Noirs to Drink Right Now While there are unproven claims that frontier photographer Peter Britt planted Pinot Noir in the Rogue Valley in the late 1880s, the grape’s provable Southern Oregon history begins in the Umpqua Valley. That’s where Richard Sommer founded HillCrest Vineyard more than 60 years ago. In 1959, just a few years after graduating with an agronomy degree from the University of California, Davis, Sommer transported Pinot Noir cuttings from Louis M. Martini’s Stanly Ranch property in Napa to Roseburg, Oregon. Dyson DeMara, who along with his wife, Susan, acquired HillCrest Vineyard from Sommer in 2003, reports that after a year of “rooting out” at a nearby location, Sommer planted his Pinot Noir vines, along with other varieties, at the HillCrest Vineyard site in 1961. Pinot Noir grapes / Image Courtesy of Deer Creek Vineyard “Latitude,” DeMara says, “brought Richard here to do world-class Pinot Noir and Riesling. He knew this latitude brought you cooler temperatures the month of harvest. The long ‘coast’ to the finish you get here in the Umpqua allows you to develop and then trap flavors and perfume.” Given the long history, why aren’t we more familiar with Pinot Noir made at the other end of Interstate 5? Volume is one significant reason. Although Pinot Noir makes up a significant portion of planting, the latest Oregon Vineyard and Winery Report shows the Rogue and Umpqua Valleys produced 14,490 tons of Pinot Noir fruit in 2022, compared to the Willamette Valley’s 61,928 tons. In addition, not all of Southern Oregon’s Pinot Noir production makes it into bottles sporting one of the region’s AVA designations. Calling it the “dual nature” of the region’s wine industry, Herb Quady, partner and winemaker at Quady North Winery in Jacksonville, says, “Most of Southern Oregon’s vineyards are small, planted to a mix of varieties, and either make wine under their own brands, or sell fruit to small wineries. However, a small number of vineyards are very large, are planted mostly to Pinot Noir and their fruit goes into the large brands headquartered in the Willamette Valley and California.” And any wines finished outside of the Southern Oregon AVA are labeled under the general Oregon AVA. So, while great Pinot Noirs are made in the southern part of Oregon (and labeled as such), you have to work to track them down. Those wines are typically made by the wineries and vineyard owners who matched their vines to locations where Pinot Noir can thrive. You might be surprised how often that doesn’t happen. You May Also Like: What Makes Pinot Noir Pinot Noir? Hill Crest Winery / Image Courtesy of Oregon Wine Board / Photography by John Valls The Southern Oregon AVA offers a wide variety of soils and microclimates for vineyard owners to select from, so it is important to choose wisely. When I buy Pinot Noirs from Southern Oregon, I look for factors that help produce wines with elegance, moderate alcohol levels and elevated acidity. For example, Irvine & Roberts estate vineyard is located in Ashland at 2,000– 2,200 feet above sea level with a north and east aspect. Co-owner Dionne Irvine says that combination “leaves us with a cool site within a warmer region. Matching varietal correctly to site allows one to make wines of a place, transparent, showing off our unique site in a way that no one can match.” I also look for wines in areas where the vineyards are cooled by maritime breezes. One of those locations is the Illinois Valley, a spot with significant Pinot Noir potential. That’s where I located Deer Creek Vineyards, owned by Audra and Kenan Hester. Their estate vineyard is located 25 miles from the Pacific Ocean as the crow flies, without any geographical obstructions between them and those cool winds. Thus, their specific location is typically 10–15 degrees cooler than the rest of the Rogue Valley, with near-constant airflows and diurnal temperature shifts as high as 63 degrees Fahrenheit. According to Kenan Hester, “The way the fruit ripens here is much more similar to Mendocino or the Willamette Valley.” If you’re ready to explore another part of Oregon to get your next Pinot Noir fix, below we're rounded up a few more of the bottles you’ll find off the beaten path—the ones I share with friends. None of them appear in Wine Enthusiast’s Buying Guide. For now. From the Shop Find Your Wine a Home Our selection of red wine glasses is the best way to enjoy the wine’s subtle aromas and bright flavors. Shop All Wine Glasses Southern Oregon Pinot Noirs to Try This article originally appeared in the April 2024 of Wine Enthusiast magazine. Click here to subscribe today! Bring the World of Wine to Your Doorstep Subscribe to Wine Enthusiast Magazine now and get 1 year for $70 $29.99. 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