Producer: Benoit Camus

Benoit Camus

In the southern Beaujolais region, Benoît Camus, a former itinerant farm worker, settled in 2003 on an estate already free of any additives or pesticides. Maintaining these good habits, he produces powerful, dense, and structured Beaujolais reds, both organic (Ecocert) and natural.

Tous ses vins

2 products

Benoit-Camus-Vagabond-Rouge-vin-naturel-2022
Benoit Camus

Vagabond Red 2022

€17,20

Benoit-Camu-Chateau-roulant-Rouge-vin-naturel-2020-2021
Benoit Camus

Red Rolling Castle 20/21

€18,40

It should come as no surprise that the names of Benoît Camus's vintages—Château Roulant, Vagabond—evoke wandering, given that the winemaker is established, and well established, in the south of Beaujolais, on the clay-limestone soils of the Pierres Dorées. Travel is part of the winemaker's life. From 1994, Benoît worked as a seasonal farmer in the Rhône department. First for the apricot harvest around Saint-Vallier, then its area of ​​travel moved from orchards to vineyards, extending into the Rhône valley and south to Banyuls. Spending two to six weeks on each farm, this team leader (who has been driving tractors since the age of fourteen) would then move on to another. This life continued until 2004, when he saw a classified ad in a newspaper: "Vines for sale in Beaujolais." "I would have preferred the Jura, whose wines I love," he said, "but since I was in Lyon at the time, it wasn't far. Once there, I realized that Beaujolais was of particular interest: unlike the Rhône Valley I knew, its viticulture had remained largely intact. In 2003, much of its traditional know-how had not yet been lost." » He discovered that many winegrowers, without thinking about organic certification, work in a traditional and natural way because they have never known anything else. Benoît therefore acquired these plots. Since he knew how to work the vines but not how to manage a cellar or a farm, his predecessor taught him the principles and helped him get started. Before selling his vines to Benoît, this old winegrower never bought pesticides. "He never went shopping" and didn't even know what SO was. "He had never heard of natural wine, and neither had I. In 2005, we didn't know this yet, and organic farming was still rare." He produced his first vintage in 2006. Benoît began conventional viticulture, weeding for two years in a row, then he heard: "We need to treat grape worm." Having bought a suitable container of pesticide, he carried out an initial treatment using a backpack sprayer. "I thought I was going to die! So I went organic, not to save the planet but to save myself." » Since then, Benoît has cultivated all his vines organically and made his wines organically.

Terroir, plots, and grape varieties

Very steep, the estate covers five hectares of Beaujolais Gamay and Chardonnay on clay-limestone soils, specific to the south of the appellation. It was initially seven hectares, but Benoît reduced the surface area to adapt it to his sales capacity. The vines are about sixty years old.

Cultivation Methods

Winemaking

Benoît Camus practices long macerations, up to six weeks, but since these macerations produce wines that require a relatively long wait, he now shortens them to two weeks. His wines, he explains, are quite powerful, they are not "small wines." After the sixth day of maceration, the tannins and polyphenols are well-defined. No additives are added in the cellar. Once a vat has started fermenting, Benoît siphons off the gas, without extracting the juice, to reinject it into another vat.

The Wines

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