Tip: The Carcassonne cite is busiest in mid-summer; visit in spring or autumn for a calmer walk. The Cabardes cellars at Chateau de Pennautier and Chateau Ventenac are 15 minutes north of the city.

More wine day trips in Languedoc

Roussillon: Collioure, Banyuls and Maury sweet wines ★ 4.7

The Roussillon is the Languedoc's natural sweet-wine neighbour, an hour south along the A9. Banyuls and Collioure share the same terraced Grenache vineyards on the schist cliffs above the Mediterranean: Banyuls is the fortified sweet style, Collioure the dry red counterpart. Maury, an hour inland, makes a similar Grenache-based Vin Doux Naturel from inland schist. The Roussillon is sometimes folded into Languedoc-Roussillon as a single region but its appellations and identity are distinct.

Pours: Banyuls Vin Doux Naturel (Grenache, fortified), Collioure rouge Grenache-Syrah from the same vineyards, Maury VDN sweet red

Tip: The cellars at Banyuls (Domaine de la Rectorie, Cellier des Templiers) and Collioure cluster along the coast road. Combine with the Cap Bear hike for vineyard-and-sea views. Maury is inland (1 hour from Banyuls) and works well as a second-day extension.

Provence: Bandol Mourvedre and Cassis whites ★ 4.5

Provence's coastal wine zones sit east of Languedoc along the Mediterranean. Bandol is the Mourvedre heartland of France, its terraced amphitheatre vineyards above the bay of La Ciotat producing structured, long-ageing reds from Domaine Tempier, Chateau de Pibarnon and Domaine de Terrebrune. Cassis, the small white-wine AOC east of Marseille, makes Clairette-and-Marsanne whites unique in Provence. The combined day-trip is a serious commitment from Languedoc but feasible from Montpellier with an early start.

Pours: Bandol rouge Mourvedre-led, Cassis blanc Clairette-Marsanne, Bandol rose from old-vine Mourvedre

Tip: Bandol cellars are clustered around La Cadiere d'Azur and Le Castellet; Domaine Tempier is the canonical visit and requires advance booking. Cassis is harder to reach by road; the boat from Cassis port to the Calanques is the natural pairing with the white wine.

Catalonia: Emporda and the Costa Brava ★ 4.4

The Spanish Catalan border is two hours south of Narbonne via the A9 and the Le Perthus pass. DO Emporda, the Catalan wine zone closest to France, makes Garnacha-Carinena reds and dry whites in the schist-and-clay terroir north of Girona. Combine with the Figueres Dali Museum or the Costa Brava cliffs at Cadaques for the canonical day-trip. The drive south on the A9 is one of Europe's most scenic motorway routes.

Pours: Emporda Garnacha-Carinena blends, Costa Brava cava from family operators, Catalan dry rose

Tip: DO Emporda cellars cluster around Sant Marti d'Empuries and Vilajuiga; Castillo Perelada and Espelt Viticultors are the two most accessible large producers. The Greek-Roman ruins at Empuries are 30 minutes from the cellars.

Southern Rhone: Chateauneuf-du-Pape and Gigondas ★ 4.6

Chateauneuf-du-Pape, the southern Rhone's flagship AOC, sits 1 hour 15 minutes north-east of Nimes via the A9 and the A7. The galets roules pebble-soil vineyards of the village cluster around the medieval papal-summer-palace ruins, with Domaine du Pegau, Chateau de Beaucastel and Chateau Rayas as the canonical visits. Gigondas, 30 minutes further into the Dentelles de Montmirail, offers a more rugged Grenache style. The Tavel rose AOC, 10 minutes from Chateauneuf, makes the original French serious rose.

Pours: Chateauneuf-du-Pape rouge 13-grape blend, Gigondas Grenache-led reds, Tavel rose (the original French rose AOC)

Tip: Chateauneuf cellars take walk-ins but appointment booking is essential at Pegau, Beaucastel and Rayas. The Dentelles de Montmirail at Gigondas are a scenic drive; pair with the village of Sablet for an aperitif. The day-trip extends naturally into a Provence weekend.

Camargue: sand-soil wines and white horses ★ 4.3

The Camargue, the Rhone delta marshlands east of Montpellier, is known for white horses, flamingos and the medieval walled town of Aigues-Mortes. The wine produced from sand-soil vineyards in the area (Sables du Golfe du Lion Vin de Pays) is mostly rose, in a pale Provence-influenced style. Listel is a long-established producer; smaller operators like Domaine de Jarras pour wines that are distinctive in the sand-vine viticulture. The combination of wine, salt-marsh tour and Aigues-Mortes town is the canonical Camargue day-trip.

Pours: Sables du Golfe du Lion rose (Vin de Pays), Camargue gris rose (Cinsault-led), Listel's sand-soil whites

Tip: Aigues-Mortes town is medieval-walled with the original 13th-century crusader port preserved. The wine cellars cluster around the salt-marsh roads east of the town. Combine with a flamingo-spotting walk at the Parc Ornithologique de Pont-de-Gau.

The Cevennes: Pelardon cheese and mountain wines ★ 4.2

The Cevennes, the mountain range north of Montpellier, is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and the home of the Pelardon goat cheese AOP. The cheese pairs naturally with the rustic Cevennes IGP reds and whites from small mountain producers. The day-trip combines a chestnut-orchard walk in autumn, a Pelardon cheese tasting at a goat farm, and a wine cellar visit at one of the small Cevennes-edge growers. The market town of Anduze is the gateway and has the Bambouseraie tropical garden as a non-wine highlight.

Pours: Cevennes IGP rustic reds (Carignan-Grenache), Pelardon goat cheese pairings, Chestnut-honey aperitifs

Tip: Pelardon farms cluster around Ales and Saint-Hippolyte-du-Fort. The Cevennes mountain vines are often hidden in chestnut forest at 400-600 metres altitude. The Train a Vapeur des Cevennes steam railway from Anduze runs in summer.

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