The handsome map of Burgundy's Cotes de Nuits you see at right is hung on the wall behind my desk. It's not that I have frequent need to refer to it - I just enjoy looking at it. Though nearly five feet long and two wide, I occasionally hover over it with a magnifying glass. Up close it looks as you see it below.
Vineyards have whimsical names here - some in indecipherable local patois, others readily translatable as The Steps of the Cat, Behind the Oven, The High Walls.
If you love wine maps, as I do, you find the ones provided in books woefully inadequate. Even so standard a reference work as Hugh Johnson's (now Jancis Robinson's) World Atlas of Wine is shockingly lacking in this department. It's maps are perennially tiny, hard to read, and aesthetically unrewarding.
A friend in San Francisco recently sent me a link to a site selling wine maps that included one that appears to have been designed by Charlie of the MTA, below left.
I also like their more conventional maps of France, Italy, the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) and California quite a bit. At 24" X 36" these are all large format things, which means they can squeeze quite a lot of information into them. In these maps, too the detail is presented in more stylized way. Note the line of latitude that references a corresponding European location.
Why Mitchell Beazley, the publisher of the aforementioned wine atlas hasn't already made the leap to an eBook that would offer features like this is a mystery to me. How about it, M-B?