Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Stilisierte Karte von Rheinhessen

Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg (Chapel Hill of Ober-Olm)

The little chapel naming the vineyard

The name of the single vineyard comes from the small chapel on the outskirts of Ober-Olm, the St. Valentinus Chapel. It was mentioned as early as 1342. The present building is a late Gothic hall church that was extended around 1720 in Baroque style. The chapel was formerly the destination of pilgrimages to St. Valentine, the emergency helper of those suffering from the "falling sickness". A wide variety of grape varieties thrive on clay marl and limestone. The single vineyard sites are widely distributed: The largest area lies on the outskirts of Ober-Olm in the direction of Essenheim, smaller areas lie to the north-east in the direction of Klein-Winternheim and to the east towards Ebersheim.

> A circular route of the municipality of Ober-Olm, also to the chapel: https://www.ober-olm.de/punkt-9-kapelle
> Nearby: the Ober-Olper forest https://www.wald-rlp.de/de/forstamt-rheinhessen/wald/naturschutzgebiete-vor-den-toren-der-hauptstadt/vom-militaerstandort-zum/wald-mit-neuen-wegen/

Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg
Ober-Olmer Kapellenberg

facts and figures

wine-growing area: 113 hectares Community: Ober-Olm Sea level: 190-250 m Exposure: south
sub-region:
Nierstein
collective vineyard site:
Domherr
single vineyard site:
Kapellenberg
village:
Ober-Olm

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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Limestone / Rendzina

limestone rendzina

Teritarian marine deposits from a calcareous algae reef

Shallow to medium-sized, very lime-rich, very stony, sandy loam soil, low storage capacity for soil water available to plants, rich in nutrients, rich in lime, good aeration, good heatability, limited rootability

Expressive, lively, aromatic, initially citrus, apple and gooseberry notes, with increasing ripe mango and passion fruit. Balanced acidity, mineral, chalky, elegant, multi-faceted, profound, closed in the youth, great development potential

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Explore the area

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eckert1, © Eckert Dreimorgenhof

Wein- und Obsthof Michael and Christoph Eckert- Dreimorgenhof

Wine and fruit farm Michael Eckert - Dreimorgenhof
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© Becker- Das Weingut

Becker- Das Weingut

Becker - Das Weingut
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