The Van Duzer Corridor is one of the youngest and most sharply defined appellations in the Willamette Valley, approved in early 2019 as Oregon's 19th AVA. It takes its name and its identity from a single geographic feature: a low gap in the Coast Range, northwest of Salem, that acts like an open window to the Pacific. Through it, cool marine air pours into the valley on summer afternoons, and that wind, more than soil or elevation, is what makes the corridor distinct.
The effect on the vines is dramatic. Afternoon winds here run notably stronger than in neighboring districts, arriving early enough to drop temperatures by mid-afternoon and dry the canopy, which naturally reduces disease pressure. In response, the grapes develop thicker skins, and the resulting Pinot Noir is deeply colored and structured, with bright, mouthwatering acidity and firm tannin. Chardonnay, Pinot Gris, and aromatic whites also thrive in the cool, breezy conditions. The soils are largely uplifted marine sedimentary loams and silts over shallow siltstone, high in silt and clay, which helps hold acidity as the fruit ripens.
This is a small, close-knit appellation of roughly 1,000 planted acres and only a handful of bonded wineries, flanked by the Eola-Amity Hills to the east and McMinnville to the north. Founding estates such as Van Duzer Vineyards and Left Coast Estate, along with newer producers like Andante, share a strong commitment to sustainable and biodynamic farming. Centered on the towns of Dallas and Rickreall, it makes an easy, uncrowded day trip from Salem for visitors chasing cool-climate, wind-shaped Pinot Noir.
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