René-Jean Dard and François Ribo started their estate in 1983 in a back street of Tain-l’Hermitage. There was about a hectare from Dard’s family, all the rest was rented or slowly acquired over the years
Born in the towns that face each other across the Rhône River, Tournon in the Ardèche and Tain-l’Hermitage in the Drôme, Dard and Ribo met in wine school in Beaune in their late teens. They work 8.5 hectares of vines scattered over seven villages, with most of their holdings in Crozes-Hermitage, some in Saint-Joseph and a slice of Hermitage. In their cellar, part of a large farm building in the hamlet of Blanche-Laine in Mercurol, they craft subtle, unextracted Syrah for immediate enjoyment (though the wines age beautifully) and several whites from Roussanne and Marsanne. What is different with them is that they view Syrah as a grape giving elegant and pleasant wines, rather than sturdy, big, tannic wines. They want their wines to taste well quickly, not after years of cellaring to dissipate hard tannins.
They make a cuvée called “C’est le Printemps” that is released in the Spring following the harvest, almost like a nouveau of Syrah. They tend to vinify by plot, because they have such a wide variety of terroir and vine ages. Among the regular cuvées is a Crozes-Hermitage red from plots located mainly in Larnage, on red clay with gravel and alluvial stones. The white is a blend of Roussanne and Marsanne planted on a mix of glacial alluvial deposits, rolled stones and red clay. The Saint-Joseph red comes from different plots of sandy granite, red clay, and gore (decomposed granite). The St-Joseph white is only Roussanne, an exception in an AOC where Marsanne dominates. The "spéciales" cuvées are all single vineyards bottlings and, with a few exceptions, are not necessarily released each vintage (in which case they are added to the "basic" blend). These include the Crozes "Les Bâties" from two hectares in red clay, the Crozes "Pé de Loup" from a soil of white gravel with kaolin (white clay), the white Crozes "Les Karrières" from very old Marsanne growing on kaolin clay.