Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Stilisierte Karte von Rheinhessen

Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg

Of birds of prey and leaning towers 

Vultures are very large, not too pretty looking scavengers. What does Gau-Weinheim have to do with you? Nothing at all. Because the word "Geyer" stood in the Middle Ages for birds of prey in general. That is, for the hawk or buzzard that lives here. The naming of the location is due to the appearance of these birds. They like to sit attentively on the vineyard stakes - called "stiggel" in Rheinhessen - and lie in wait for prey. Certainly, they also fly around the municipal tower, which is a protected monument. At 5.38 degrees, it is more crooked than the Tower of Pisa! Gau-Weinheim is located in the Rhine-Hessian hill country in a hollow, at the southeastern foothills of the 271m high Wißberg. The Geyersberg site runs east along the village and is protected from cold north winds. On dark loess and heavy clay soils grow the classic grape varieties Riesling, Silvaner, Müller-Thurgau and fruity wines of the varieties Scheurebe and Bacchus as well as red wines. 

> Historical and informative facts about the leaning tower on the village homepage: https://www.gau-weinheim.de/ortsgemeinde/bauwerke/gemeindeturm.html 
> Other sites in Rheinhessen with the name Geyersberg: Bechtheimer Geyersberg
> Also Geiersberg with "i" in communities: Armsheim and Dittelsheim-Hessloch
> Other sites with animal name: Wöllsteiner Äffchen, Dorn-Dürkheimer Hasensprung or Zornheimer Vogelsang

Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg
Gau-Weinheimer Geyersberg

facts and figures

wine-growing area: 63 hectares Community: Gau-Weinheim Sea level: 140-200 m Exposure: Southwest to South
sub-region:
Bingen
collective vineyard site:
Kurfürstenstück
single vineyard site:
Geyersberg
village:
Gau-Weinheim

soil types

Marl / pelosol

Clay marl pelosol

Lime-rich clayey deposits of the teritary sea

Deep, calcareous clay soil with a high proportion of swellable clay, lower storage capacity for soil water available to plants, limited water permeability and ventilation, nutrient-rich, very calcareous, moderate warmability, difficult to root through

Full-bodied, dense, rich, moderate acidity, creamy enamel. Expressive, ripe, mango, apricot, honeydew melon, apricot. Less minerality, more fruity, full-bodied sustainability

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