NameWink
Area CoveredHaute Savoie & Jura
InterestsFood, Walking, Wine

Introducing Wink - your Friend at the other End!

About Me

I've worked in the world of wine for over 30 years (yes, I was very young when I started) and have travelled widely through wine regions around the world. Most of my work has been as a wine educator and a wine writer, and I've participated in many professional group visits to wine regions, as well as leading the occasional consumer wine tour.

For over 15 years I've split my time between London and my base in the French Alps in France, and this has meant I've explored some wine regions in great depth especially the lesser-known regions of Savoie and Jura not too far from my French base - I've written widely on these regions. However, I've also made trips over the years to the classic areas like Champagne, Alsace, Burgundy, Loire Valley, the Rhône Valley, Provence, Languedoc and not forgetting Bordeaux.

Having also worked in wine book publishing, in 2007 I established the Wine Travel Guides website offering on-line travel guides to all the wine regions of France, written by a team of specialists with their own insider knowledge to the wine regions - I edit all the guides and have regular contact with all my local specialists so I can keep everything up-to-date.

Some unique experiences I can help you to plan are:
Visits to organic and biodynamic wine producers in Alsace, the Loire Valley or Languedoc-Roussillon.
Gastronomic meals in the heart of the French wine regions in restaurants that focus on local wines to match the food.
Tours and tastings at several top Bordeaux Châteaux.
Vistis to lesser-known Champagne producers.
A walk, meal and explanation of Vin Jaune in the hilltop village of Château-Chalon in the Jura.

Ask me about these experiences and anything else about the wine regions of France - I'd love to help you plan your perfect wine trip!

Outside of wine, I love the mountains to ski in winter or walk in summer. My French base is in the Aravis Mountains close to Annecy, a gorgeous area only an hour from Geneva. I can help you plan trips in my immediate local area too and rent an apartment out in my chalet, see below!

My Reviews

Feedback from Barbara, Newcastle, UK

We had a fab time and the weather was great. We enjoyed Bages,  Paulliac, (found La Salamandre but it was heaving at lunch time so went next door which was nicer ambience but not very good food! We did enjoy lunch in Margaux at La Brasserie du L read more ...

Rough Guides Introduction to France

Loire valley, Place Plumerau in Tours, pavement cafe in town square.
Photographer: Kim Sayer
Copyright: dkimages

The sheer physical diversity of France would be hard to exhaust in a lifetime of visits. Landscapes range from the fretted coasts of Brittany and the limestone hills of Provence to the canyons of the Pyrenees and the half-moon bays of Corsica, and from the lushly wooded valleys of the Dordogne and the gentle meadows of the Loire valley to the glaciated peaks of the Alps. Each region looks and feels different, has its own style of architecture, its own characteristic food and often its own dialect. Though the French word pays is the term for a whole country, people frequently refer to their own region as mon pays - my country - and this strong sense of regional identity has persisted despite centuries of centralizing governments, from Louis XIV to de Gaulle.
Industrialization came relatively late to France, and for all the millions of French people that live in cities, the idea persists that theirs is a rural country. The importance of the land reverberates throughout French culture, manifesting itself in areas as diverse as regional pride in local cuisine and the state's fierce defence of Europe's agricultural subsidies. Perhaps the most striking feature of the French countryside is the sense of space. There are huge tracts of woodland and undeveloped land without a house in sight, and, away from the main urban centres, hundreds of towns and villages have changed only slowly and organically over the years, their old houses and streets intact, as much a part of the natural landscape as the rivers, hills and fields.
Despite this image of pastoral tranquillity, France's history is notable for its extraordinary vigour. For more than a thousand years the country has been in the vanguard of European development, and the accumulation of wealth and experience is evident everywhere in the astonishing variety of things to see, from the Dordogne's prehistoric cave-paintings and the Roman monuments of the south, to the Gothic cathedrals of the north, the châteaux of the Loire, and the cutting-edge architecture of the grands projets in Paris. This legacy of history and culture - la patrimoine - is so widely dispersed across the land that even the briefest of stays will leave the visitor with a powerful sense of France's past.
The importance of these traditions is felt deeply by the French state, which fights to preserve and develop its national culture perhaps harder than any other country in the world, and private companies, which also strive to maintain French traditions in arenas as diverse as haute couture, pottery and, of course, food. The fruits of these efforts are evident in the subsidized arts, notably the film industry, and in the lavishly endowed and innovative museums and galleries. From colonial history to fishing techniques, aeroplane design to textiles, and migrant shepherds to manicure, these collections can be found across the nation, but, inevitably, first place must go to the fabulous displays of fine art in Paris, a city which has nurtured more than its share of the finest creative artists of the last century and a half, both French - Monet and Matisse for example - and foreign, such as Picasso and Van Gogh.
There are all kinds of pegs on which to hang a holiday in France: a city, a region, a river, a mountain range, gastronomy, cathedrals, châteaux. All that open space means there's endless scope for outdoor activities - from walking, canoeing and cycling to skiing and sailing - but if you need more urban stimuli - clubs, shops, fashion, movies, music - then the great cities provide them in abundance.

© 2009 ROUGH GUIDES LTD

Read more on Rough Guides or Buy the book

Talk to us