We're getting there
We agree more than we thought, but on a few things we don't...
>> "(Reference to the AC documents I linked to shows that lieu-dit and climat are officially regarded as the same thing.)" (there is no reason why not, but this must concern only a tiny percentage of vineyards)
I just looked, but can't find where I said that - if I did say that than that is a typo and the word NOT should be in there and that will explain much of the difference. Lieux-dits and Climat are different.
>> "A lieux-dit is pretty much what we would consider an individual vineyard" (can be but, but rarely)
Restricting ourselves to the world of wine, I think that it is...
"Find Morgeot. Morgeot is a climat that consists of the lieux-dit Morgeot" (or just the opposite, if one prefers..)
The lieux-dit does not consist of the climat Moregot. A subset does contain a set, but rather the opposite. The Climat Morgeot a collection of lieux-dits is 10 - 20 times larger than the liexu-dit Morgeot, a vineyard.
"He can only bottle the lieux-dits he owns" (rare are the winegrowers who own an entire lieu-dit)
I'm not saying that he must own it in its entirety, but he must have landholding within the lieux-dit in question to use the lieux-dit in question to bottle it, rather than a more general name. Just like you must own Gevrey-Chambertin to bottle it, and can't instead choose to bottle it as Volnay.
>> Unless I read your post too quickly, you implied that Mouton Rothschild could sell Clerc Milon as M.R. if they so wished. I don't think this is quite the case, but this would probably be more to do with local wine politics (the Syndicat Viticole de Pauillac and the Syndicat des Crus Classés du Médoc) than the INAO.
No, you misunderstood me here. You seemed to indicate doubt as to whether or not we could prove if a wine was bottled form a particular lieux-dit and I was just making the point that it's basically impossible to know FOR SURE where the grapes fro any wine come from. That's all. They can't put the grapes where they want in Bordeaux either.
As for the legal significance of lieux-dits, can you or anyone else following this thread tell me how they are presented on the labels you've seen? Do they say, for example, "lieu-dit Les Champs", or just "Les Champs"? In the latter instance, it certainly makes Les Champs seem like either a brand name or a superior vineyard…
The person who wrote about print size has a point too.
"Let me put it to you this way, as long as you accept that any named vineyard is not a lieu dit (which you did in your next to last post), then we can lay this argument to rest.
Best regards,
Alex R."
I think at this point, it has run its course, so I agree to a truce. It was a nice discussion though. (I will certainly allow for a final rebuttal as a courtesy! And do reserve the right to search for an image of a label or two!)