LES COMBETTES LES FOLATIÈRES CLAVOILLON LE MONTRACHET LES PUCELLES
CHEVALIER-MONTRACHET PULIGNY-MONTRACHET BIENVENUES-BÂTARD-MONTRACHET BÂTARD-MONTRACHET
CHASSAGNE-MONTRACHET
DOMAINE LEFLAIVE 2022 VINTAGE, EN PRIMEUR
“Wonderful… above all in quality. The hot, even scorching summer made us wonder how our vines would react. It is clear that they adapted very well.” BRICE DE LA MORANDIÈRE, NOVEMBER 2023
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Pierre Vincent and Brice de La Morandière
DOMAINE LEFLAIVE 2022 Following the devastatingly small 2021 crop, I am pleased to report both quantity and quality at Domaine Leflaive in 2022. Adam Brett-Smith and I tasted the wines in November 2023, with owner Brice de La Morandière and winemaker Pierre Vincent, in the pristine cellars at Rue de l’Eglise, Puligny-Montrachet. Including the new Esprit Leflaive range (to be released separately) and the Mâcon wines, this is now a three-hour tasting. Rubber-soled shoes and a coat are recommended.
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These annual tastings have developed into enlightening exchanges over the years since Brice and Pierre arrived at Domaine Leflaive, in the 2014 and 2017 vintages respectively (two auspicious white Burgundy years). As brilliant as the current team unquestionably is, it struck me during this tasting that we are fleeting observers in the lives of these terroirs, which will outlast us all. The true contribution of their custodians is to let the wines speak for themselves. To their credit, Brice and Pierre have once again done just that: their hands-off approach has resulted in startingly clear, resonant translations of the vineyards’ personalities, guiding without imposing. The 2022s are a joy to taste, their characters on open display. From the over-performing Bourgogne Blanc, made exclusively from plots in Puligny-Montrachet, to the resonant power of Combettes, to the clay-laden richness of Bâtard, the extroverts showed beautifully. Even the habitually shyer wines, such as Pucelles and Chevalier, afforded a glimpse of their future selves, in a way more akin to 2017 than 2014, for example.
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In the Mâconnais, Brice and Pierre’s decision to separate out various terroirs from the 2017 vintage continues to provide insight into a previously under-appreciated landscape. Alongside the much-loved Mâcon-Verzé blend (made since 2004), we now have the zesty, precise Mâcon-Verzé Les Chênes and the mineral-rich, powerful Mâcon-Verzé Le Monté, among others.
June opened with a rain deficit of 30% versus normal. This turned out to be a month of contrasts, with “a beautiful period of rain” (an alien concept to the British but I will keep Brice’s description) on the 3rd and 4th, then a heatwave from the 16th to the 21st, reaching 37°C two days in a row, thunderstorms from the 22nd, and nearly 55mm of much needed rain around the 30th.
The 2022 growing season at Leflaive went something like this – with thanks to Brice for his commentary…
The weather was warm in the first half of July, then hot, with a heatwave on the 19th and 20th. Fortunately, the morning temperatures remained below 20°C. A third heatwave occurred from 1st - 4th August. From 14th August, temperatures cooled, with daily showers allowing the vines to reach maturity.
The winter was mild, with little rain. March was exceptionally dry and fortunately quite cool, which slowed down the start of vegetative growth. April saw the now-customary nervous succession of frosty mornings. Thankfully, damage was avoided, aided by Leflaive’s late pruning and use of wind turbines. The domaine has now abandoned anti-frost candles in the vineyards because, in Brice’s words, “they are much too polluting.” (They also contain palm oil…) As often happens now, spring started suddenly – “more like the beginning of summer”, resulting in rapid growth in the vines. Whilst vine development in mid-April was a little later than in recent years, by mid-May it was ahead of the curve. As Brice put it, “Vine growth records fell at the same rate as monthly temperature records.” Flowering on Puligny’s slopes was over by 23rd May and by the beginning of June for the village and Bourgogne Blanc sites on the plain.
The harvest began on 25th August. It was the inaugural crop for the domaine’s impressive new cuverie (whose reception area feels more church than chai), which worked perfectly, allowing for quicker grape handling and long pressings, both beneficial for the quality of the musts. Nature has worked wonders this year, compensating for the frost-torn 2021s with a generous 2022 crop and demonstrating that warm summers no longer result inevitably in a certain solaire style of fruit ripeness. These are luminous, mineral-driven wines which will rank in the top echelon of recent Leflaive vintages. As we left the domaine under a starry Puligny sky, Adam and I tried to find four words to describe them – we came up with “elegance, tension, sensuality, purity”. You heard it here first.
GUY SEDDON Head of Fine Wine Buying December 2023
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VINEYARD HOLDINGS MÂCONNAIS
Hectares
Years Planted
Mâcon-Verzé (Les Cassons, En Perret, Escolles, Les Muse)
12.05
1930 - 2010
Mâcon-Verzé Les Chênes
3.43
1935 (0.45 ha); 1973 - 2002 (2.98 ha)
Mâcon-Verzé Le Monté
0.94
1964 - 1965
Mâcon-Igé
0.82
1986 - 1989
Bourgogne Blanc (Les Parties, Les Houlières and La Plante des Champs)
4.31
1979 - 2003
Puligny-Montrachet
4.70
1955 - 2003
Chassagne-Montrachet 1er Cru La Maltroie
0.17
2005 - 2006
Meursault 1er Cru Sous le Dos d’Âne
1.26
1995 - 2004
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Clavoillon
4.79
1959 - 1988
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Folatières
1.60
1962 - 1999
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Combettes
0.73
1963 - 1972
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Pucelles
2.75
1957 - 1985
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet Grand Cru
1.15
1958 - 1959
Bâtard-Montrachet Grand Cru
1.72
1962 - 1989
Chevalier-Montrachet Grand Cru
1.79
1955 - 1980
Le Montrachet Grand Cru
0.08
1960
VILLAGE & REGIONAL WINES
PREMIER CRU VINEYARDS 6
GRAND CRU VINEYARDS
Please Note These wines are sold on the clear understanding that they will be stored in and delivered to the UK only. Due to high demand outstripping available quantities, many of these wines are on allocation. We ask for a balanced order as it is simply not possible nor fair to other customers to give an allocation of just the Grand Crus, for example. For further advice, please speak to your usual salesperson or ring our Fine Wine Sales Team on 020 7265 2430.
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2022 TASTING NOTES Tasting notes by Adam Brett-Smith (unless otherwise specified)
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DOMAINES LEFLAIVE Domaines Leflaive (with an ‘s’) is the Domaine’s operation in the Mâconnais. We have offered the Mâcon-Verzé since its inaugural 2004 vintage. In the 2017 vintage, two single vineyard cuvées were isolated, now joined by the Mâcon-Igé and Mâcon-Solutré-Pouilly.
MÂCON-VERZÉ
MÂCON-IGÉ
The “original” Mâcon-Verzé, first offered by us in 2004 and a cult wine in its own right. Subtle gold colour. On the nose is a delectable balance of piercingly pure, creamy and citrussy fruit. The palate is fresh, with supple, clean, buttery flavours, nice balance and fine length. Fully lives-up to its epithet “the least expensive fine wine in the world”.
This has been called the Folatières of the Domaine’s Mâconnais wines for its heart-on-sleeve quality. The site is on cooler, stony ground. Open and inviting with aromas of flowers and white fruits. The palate is silky, with a lovely freshness and tension on the finish. A balanced and generous wine. Tasting note by Pierre Vincent.
Corney & Barrow Score 17 Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028
Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028 £395/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £435/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
£385/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £192.50/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £425/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
MÂCON-VERZÉ LES CHÊNES
MÂCON-SOLUTRÉ-POUILLY
Lying north/north-west of Le Monté (see below) and on clay/limestone soil, this has a sweet, more biscuit-rich perfume. The palate is taut, very well “held” in this superripe vintage, is silkily fruited and offers slightly greater length. Lovely wine.
The most overt and open of the Mâcon stable whose vineyard, at the bottom of the valley, shares the same rich, alkaline clay soil as Pouilly-Fuissé. The nose is quite shy, with floral notes and just a hint of brioche. The palate is taut with a refreshing minerality, and the finish reinforces this sense of freshness with pleasant bitter notes. Tasting note by Pierre Vincent.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028 £455/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £495/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
MÂCON-VERZÉ LE MONTÉ The rarest of the single vineyard wines, at just 0.94 hectares. This is more mineral in style, intense on both the nose and the palate with a taut, more subdued richness – Puligny like – and a flare of freshness and acidity on the finish. Pierre Vincent’s favourite! Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2029 £455/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £495/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028
£205/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK
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LEFLAIVE & ASSOCIÉS These two wines stem from Domaine Leflaive’s longstanding relationships with a small number of quality growers in the Côte de Beaune. The two tasting notes below are from Pierre Vincent.
BOURGOGNE BLANC (ASSOCIÉS) Sourced from five biodynamically farmed, minute plots (Les Equinces, Bluses, Le Pré la Dame, Les Femelottes, Champ Perrier) and owned by two sisters who have a particularly close relationship with the Domaine. Very floral and fresh on the nose. The palate is beautifully fine, in the style of a Côte d’Or white from Puligny: purity, freshness and refinement. This encapsulates the vintage with a superb balance between finesse and density! Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2027
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£635/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £675/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
AUXEY-DURESSES Lying between Meursault and the rather beautiful village of Saint-Romain, you will see a lot more of this traditionally cool (climate) appellation as global warming exacts its influence. A luminous wine of great purity. The palate is dense but without any sense of heaviness or excess. Salty-mineral notes linger on the superbly long finish. Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028 £555/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £595/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
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DOMAINE LEFLAIVE BOURGOGNE BLANC
PULIGNY-MONTRACHET 1ER CRU CLAVOILLON
“A very little key will open a very heavy door” was the rather inconsequential thought that passed through my mind when I tasted this wine. It’s the “ringer” of course, the wine that fools the great and the good as much as it rewards the smart money, the drinker of wine rather than of labels…. You’ve probably guessed I love this, the beautiful opener in this most wonderful of tastings. Three small plots – La Plante des Champs, Les Parties, Les Houlières (see map) are laced together in 2022 to produce a pale gold wine with an elegantly, almost hauntingly perfumed nose of white and golden fruit, so Puligny-like (hardly surprising really). The palate is wonderfully taut, with lacy, rich fruits, firm, dry, clean and supple at the same time. Lovely length as well. A joy.
This vineyard, of which the Domaine owns 85%, is just five hectares in size and with properly old vines, the oldest dating back to 1959 and the youngest to 1988. Particular attention has been devoted these last nine years to exploiting its cooler, denser, heavier soils and it plays 2022 pretty effortlessly. The nose has an intriguing perfume of florid white fruit and a stony restraint unusual in this wine. The palate is full flavoured for sure but with a dry, linear thread of power that almost hungers to leave its premier cru appellation, rather like a tenor yearning to become a bass baritone – well, that’s how it seemed to me. Rather a grand wine I thought.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2029 £400/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £440/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5+ Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2031 £1,095/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £1,135/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
PULIGNY-MONTRACHET
PULIGNY-MONTRACHET 1ER CRU FOLATIÈRES
The oldest vines of the seven plots that go to make up this village Puligny date from 1955. Each plot, Les Houlières, Les Reuchaux, Les Grands Champs, La Rue aux Vaches, Les Nosroyes, Les Brelances, Les Tremblots, give a tilt to the whole and all play well in 2022. Green-gold colour. The nose is subdued with a subtle insinuating white fruit perfume, sherbet-fresh. The palate is purely, cleanly flavoured as if holding the natural sunny disposition of the vintages on a tight rein, then builds slowly to a measured, steady, supple, rich finish.
Another old vine vineyard (1962-1999) that has played this vintage quite beautifully and with absolute fidelity to this cru’s natural exoticism. Yellow gold colour. Bullseye Folatières nose of biscuity rich, buttery, nougat-laden fruit but lifted with a restrained, elegant freshness. The palate is sensuously flavoured, lush, layered and succulent to the extended finish. An absolute pleasure giver but serious with it.
Corney & Barrow Score 17 Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2029 £695/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £735/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
MEURSAULT 1ER CRU SOUS LE DOS D’ÂNE
Corney & Barrow Score 18 Recommended drinking from 2026 - 2031 £1,625/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £1,665/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Tasting Guide
This is the other “ringer” of the Domaine, the wine to show blind and baffle your friends (and enemies) who too often forget that the Domaine even produces a Meursault… Replanted to Chardonnay from 1995, it is a joy in 2022. Spun gold colour. The nose is delectable, with a perfume of creamy white and yellow fruits, fresh, pure, layered. The palate balances absolute ripeness with an extended buttery purity, an almost casual concentration and effortless length. “Beautiful without knowing it – true beauty”, I scribbled in the margin.
Our tasting notes provide full details but, at your request, we have
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5+ Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2030
than they are both cars and have wheels. It is not that different with
£950/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £990/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
also introduced a clear and simple marking system. We hope these guidelines assist you in your selection. For the benefit of simplicity, wines are scored out of 20. We will often use a range of scores (e.g. 16.5 to 17) to indicate the potential to achieve a higher mark. When a ‘+’ is shown it adds further to that potential. Wines from lesser vintages will, inevitably, show a lower overall score. Wines are judged, in a very broad sense, against their peers. Why? Well, you cannot easily compare a Ford with an Aston Martin, other wine. A score is a summary only. The devil is in the detail, so please focus on the tasting notes and, as always, speak to our sales team.
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PULIGNY-MONTRACHET 1ER CRU LES COMBETTES
BIENVENUES-BÂTARD-MONTRACHET GRAND CRU
I am always apologising to the C&B team for my obsession with this, the smallest holding of the premiers crus (0.73 hectares) and with the oldest vines (dating back to 1963). Each year the Domaine considers a wholesale replanting of the vineyard; each year the pathetic quantity made is just so good that another stay of execution is agreed…
Of course, these are the oldest vines of this Domaine, planted in 1958 and 1959 respectively. Tasted immediately after the 1er cru Pucelles, the contrast could not be greater. Full, yellow-gold colour. The nose is… sensual, with a hauntingly (that word again) creamy, golden fruit perfume of old, old vine fruit, utterly at ease and wearing the vintage like a cloak. The palate mirrors the nose, with a weight of silken fruit flavours, effortlessly carried on a high-tension thread, super-fine and finely grained. This manages to be both a “heart on sleeve” wine and sublimely complex and profound. Really beautiful.
Green, gold colour. The youth, the vigour, the brightness and the warmth of the vintage are here interpreted almost atmospherically with a nose of infinite subtlety and golden old vine fruit, an elusive, creamy butteriness and shadows only of minerality. The palate has extraordinary tension and purity, wearing the vintage’s power and lushness with a lightness of touch but absolute authority. “Resonates” I wrote. “This is it.” Make of that what you will. Corney & Barrow Score 18 - 18.5 Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2032 £2,285/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £2,325/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
PULIGNY-MONTRACHET 1ER CRU LES PUCELLES 14
This is seen by many as the essence of the Domaine’s soul, not because at 2.8 hectares it is the largest (it isn’t), nor even because of all the premiers crus it lies closest to the grands crus (see map). No, it is because it comes closest to the classical ideal of Puligny itself, the rapier not the broadsword, the piercingly fine-grained purity rather than mere weight and above all, the taut elegance for which this vineyard is renowned. The 2022 is a beautiful wine. Golden white in colour and possessing that characteristic yearning, elusive perfume of intricate but super ripe fruit and a kick of dry limestone minerality. The palate is very taut in structure with flashes of fresh, supple, subtly rich, lithe flavours, layered and with a flare of freshness and purity on the finish. Corney & Barrow Score 18 Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2032 £2,695/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £2,735/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Corney & Barrow Score 19 Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2033 £2,495/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,705/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
BÂTARD-MONTRACHET GRAND CRU There is here an element of role reversal with the Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet. Fascinatingly, the normal overt seductiveness of this wine is in abeyance, for here the perfume is restrained, subliminally elegant, even refined in its sweetly supple fruit. The palate however, has that hallmark sensuality with an easy silken density, rich flavours and broad, golden fruit, the whole lifted on the sustained finish by a flare of acidity and tension. A wonderful Bâtard. Corney & Barrow Score 18+ Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2034 £2,795/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,905/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
CHEVALIER-MONTRACHET GRAND CRU The monumental reputation of this tiny 1.79 hectare plot has perhaps never been better illustrated than in 2022. That is not to say that it is the greatest Chevalier I have ever tasted, simply that you marvel at how it wears the stamp of the vintage so lightly and preserves its own identity with such casual power. Profound, green gold colour. The nose, as almost always, is compressed, clenched, with flashes only of white and golden fruit and that high tensile thread of intricate, lacy, mineral dry perfume. Initially, the palate is apparently, surprisingly at ease, silken dense, latently powerful, with characteristic lean succulence which tightens into extraordinary grip and compressed power on the finish. Deeply impressive. Corney & Barrow Score 19 Recommended drinking from 2028 - 2035 £3,395/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £2,305/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
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MAPS OF DOMAINE LEFLAIVE VINEYARD HOLDINGS Plan du Domaine
M C B B
P P P P C M
Plan du Domaine 16
L L L L L L
G R ANDS CRUS 4 , 8 HA
Montrachet Chevalier-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet PREMIERS CRUS 10, 8 HA
Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatières Puligny-Montrachet Le Clavoillon Chassagne-Montrachet La Maltroie Meursault Sous le Dos d’Âne G R ANDS CRUS 4 ,R8ANDS HA G CRUS 4 , 8 HA Montrachet
Montrachet Chevalier-Montrachet Chevalier-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet PREMIERS CRUS 10, 8 HA PREMIERS CRUS 10, 8 HA Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles
Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles Combettes Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes Folatières Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatières Le Clavoillon Puligny-Montrachet LeLa Clavoillon Chassagne-Montrachet Maltroie Chassagne-Montrachet Meursault Sous le Dos d’La ÂneMaltroie Meursault Sous le Dos d’Âne PU LIG NY- MONTR ACHET VILL AG E 4 ,6LIG HANY- MONTR ACHET VILL AG E PU novembre 2016 4 ,6 HA Les Tremblots
Les Tremblots La Rue aux Vaches
L L L
novembre 2016
PU LIG NY- MONTR ACH E T VILL AG E 4 ,6 HA
Les Tremblots La Rue aux Vaches Les Brelances Les Grands Champs Les Nosroyes Les Reuchaux BOURGOGNE BLANC 4 HA
Les Parties Les Houlières La Plante des Champs
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RECOMMENDED DRINKING DATES We are regularly asked for more specific drinking dates for white Burgundies, in particular the great domaines.
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REVISED DRINKING DATES
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Chevalier-Montrachet
2013
2012
2014
2017
2017
2020
2021
Bâtard-Montrachet
2011
2012
2013
2016
2017
2020
2021
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet
2012
2012
2013
2016
2017
2020
2021
Pucelles
2011
2010
2012
2015
2016
2020
2021
Folatières
2010
2010
2011
2015
2016
2018
2018
Combettes
2010
2010
2012
2015
2015
2021
2018
Clavoillon
2009
2010
2011
2015
2015
2019
2017
Puligny-Montrachet
2009
2009
2010
2013
2013
2018
2017
Meursault Sous Le Dos d’Âne
2009
2009
2011
2013
2013
2018
2017
Bourgogne Blanc
2008
2008
2010
2013
2011
2017
2016
For your interest and reference we have included our original recommendations made at the launch of the new vintages below.
ORIGINAL DRINKING DATES
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Chevalier-Montrachet
2013-2019
2012-2016
2014-2017
2015-2018
2013-2017
2017-2020
2018-2022
Bâtard-Montrachet
2012-2018
2012-2015
2013-2016
2013-2016
2013-2018
2016-2019
2017-2021
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet
2012-2017
2012-2014
2012-2016
2013-2016
2013-2018
2016-2019
2017-2021
Pucelles
2010-2015
2011-2013
2011-2015
2012-2015
2013-2017
2015-2020
2016-2020
Folatières
2008-2013
2010-2011
2010-2013
2011-2013
2012-2015
2015-2017
2014-2017
Combettes
2010-2015
2010-2012
2011-2014
2012-2014
2013-2016
2013-2019
2015-2018
Clavoillon
2008-2012
2010-2011
2010-2012
2011-2014
2012-2016
2013-2017
2014-2016
Puligny-Montrachet
2009-2012
2009-2010
2009-2012
2011-2013
2012-2016
2013-2017
2014-2016
Meursault Sous Le Dos d’Âne
2009-2012
2009-2011
2010-2012
2011-2013
2012-2016
2013-2016
2014-2016
Bourgogne Blanc
2007-2010
2008-2009
2009-2011
2010-2013
2011-2014
2012-2015
2013-2015
* Too early for revision
Here, therefore, are specific recommendations of drinking dates for every recent vintage. Of course, taste is an extremely personal thing and these dates are conservative, but having tasted and analysed these wines extensively over the last few years, we absolutely believe that opening these wines at the dates indicated will ensure maximum enjoyment.
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019*
2020*
2021*
2022*
2021
2023
2018-2026
See below
See below
2021-2030
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
2021
2022
2016-2025
2017-2024
2018-2028
2018-2025
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
2021
2022
2016-2025
2019-2024
2020-2025
2020-2026
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
2021
2021
2017-2024
2018-2024
2019-2025
2021-2025
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
2018
2020
2017-2024
2017-2024
2018-2023
2019-2024
2021-2026
See below
See below
See below
See below
2020
2020
2017-2024
2018-2024
See below
2019-2023
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
2017
2019
2016-2024
2017-2024
2019-2025
2019-2024
2021-2026
See below
See below
See below
See below
2017
2019
2016-2026
2017-2023
2018-2023
2019-2023
2020-2025
See below
See below
See below
See below
2018
2019
2016-2024
2017-2023
2018-2023
2019-2023
2020-2026
See below
See below
See below
See below
2017
2019
2016-2022
2017-2023
2018-2022
2019-2022
2020-2025
See below
See below
See below
See below
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2017-2021
2019-2023
2018-2022
2019-2029
2020-2029
2021-2028
2022-2027
2022-2028
2024-2030
2025-2031
2028-2035
2017-2020
2018-2022
2016-2022
2017-2023
2018-2024
2019-2025
2022-2026
2023-2026
2024-2030
2025-2029
2027-2034
2017-2020
2018-2022
2018-2022
2019-2023
2020-2024
2020-2025
2021-2026
2023-2026
2024-2028
2025-2029
2027-2033
2016-2019
2017-2021
2017-2022
2018-2023
2019-2023
2021-2024
2020-2025
2023-2026
2024-2028
2025-2029
2027-2032
2016-2018
2016-2020
2017-2021
2017-2022
2018-2022
2019-2023
2021-2023
2022-2025
2023-2027
2024-2028
2026-2031
2016-2019
2017-2020
2017-2020+
2018-2023
2019-2023
2020-2024
2021-2024
2022-2025
2023-2027
2024-2028
2027-2032
2015-2017
2015-2019
2016-2021
2017-2022
2018-2022
2019-2023
2021-2023
2022-2025
2023-2026
2024-2027
2025-2031
2014-2017
2016-2019
2016-2021
2017-2022
2018-2022
2019-2022
2020-2023
2021-2024
2023-2025
2023-2026
2025-2029
2015-2018
2015-2019
2016-2021
2017-2022
2018-2022
2019-2022
2020-2023
2022-2024
2023-2026
2024-2027
2025-2030
2014-2017
2015-2018
2016-2020
2017-2021
2018-2020
2019-2021
2020-2022
2021-2024
2023-2025
2023-2026
2024-2029
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CONTACT US Our Locations LONDON 1 Thomas More Street London E1W 1YZ T +44 (0)20 7265 2400 sales@corneyandbarrow.com
EDINBURGH Oxenfoord Castle by Pathhead Midlothian, Scotland EH37 5UB T +44 (0)1875 321 921 edinburgh@corneyandbarrow.com
EAST ANGLIA Belvoir House, High Street Newmarket, Suffolk CB8 8DH T +44 (0)1638 600 000 newmarket@corneyandbarrow.com
NORTH OF ENGLAND 4 Park Square East Leeds LS1 2NE T +44 (0)1133 400 380 northofengland@corneyandbarrow.com
AYR 8 Academy Street, Ayr Ayrshire, Scotland KA7 1HT T +44 (0)1292 267 000 ayr@corneyandbarrow.com
SINGAPORE 70 Anson Road #07-01 Hub Synergy Point Singapore 079905 T +65 6221 8530 singapore@corneyandbarrow.com
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The colours on the cover correspond to the soil types as mapped on the Geoportail website. © www.geoportail.gouv.fr Corney & Barrow are supporting The Woodland Trust and The World Land Trust in the production of this brochure. The cover material has created 3.21m2 of New Native Woodland within the UK and captured 0.128kg of Carbon Dioxide for The Woodland Trust. The text materials support The World Land Trust, creating the equivalent of 83kg of Carbon Dioxide which will enable them to protect 16m2 of critically threatened tropical forest.
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