“The Tuscany of Austria”

Landscape

There are areas that are simply magical, fabulous. Or even a bit enchanted, almost as if from another world. This is also true of southern Styria, which literally grounds you with its gently rolling hills, forested peaks and fertile vineyards. There is something almost meditative about the peace and tranquility that this vineyard-green landscape exudes. One feels a deep sense of happiness and pure, inner peace here.

Kreuzberg

Especially the area around the 633 meter high Kreuzberg with its Mediterranean-Illyrian climate, long, warm summer days and cool nights, reinforces the impression of being in a historically grown place of power. Already the Illyrians, Celts and later the Romans, cultivated their vines here.

Even today, southern Styria, the “Styrian Tuscany”, as it is often called, is a piece of intact nature and above all: a landscape of enjoyment. With numerous “Hauben” restaurants and rustic “Buschenschänken” (wine taverns). A hidden paradise from a time seemingly long gone – in the here and now. A place for the senses. A home for gourmets and wine lovers.

It is precisely here, in this great white wine region, which lies roughly on the same latitude as the growing regions of Montrachet, Chablis, Sancerre or South Tyrol, where the hidden champion Thomas Rothschädl creates SIGNUM BLANC. Each sip tells the story of its origin and provenance. Ripe, elegant wines with delicate fruit, balanced acidity and a mineral note on the finish. The result of an ingenious terroir and a congenial winemaker.

Woman in the vineyard

Summer at Kreuzberg

Geographical location and climate

Illyrian climate in southern Styria

The Illyrian climate of southern Styria is an Alpine-Adriatic climate and prevails in Austria’s southeast and in parts of Slovenia. Protected by the Alpine barrier, the summers there are still as you remember them as a child: warm, sunny and endless. These summers transition very slowly into a golden autumn. Warm days, cool nights in early summer, a summer sun average of over 20 degrees ensure that the wine can develop optimal fruit.

Illyrian climate brings more humidity than a Mediterranean climate. As it grows, the vine loves the showers and thunderstorms that the Adriatic occasionally sends up. In some phases of the summer, the wine in southern Styria also enjoys a Pannonian climate, dry and with little precipitation. The grapes dry out and stretch out towards the sun.

Illyrian climate is a gifted climate, rich in variety and unpredictable. In this respect, Styrian winegrowers have a tradition of maintaining a good relationship with the weather god. They are rewarded with magnificent vintages.