The river flooded in 2016, bursting its banks and rising almost 4 metres, and before that in 2013, 1910 and 1804. Many lives were lost in 1804 and 1910, in catastrophes remembered only in stories read from history books to bored schoolchildren. The sisters' great-grandmother Anna Meyer lived through the 1910 flood, although she never spoke of it to Meike and Dörte.
They are the fifth generation of their family to make wine in the village of Dernau. Meike, 44, is blond, thoughtful and a little serious; Dörte, 42, who has dark hair that comes down to her waist, is quicker to laugh. Both have the same steady gaze. Their father, Werner Näkel, is a hero in the Ahr, widely credited with transforming it from a place where sugar was added routinely to cheap, bad wine into a region with award-winning vintages.
After studying at the prestigious Hochschule Geisenheim University, the sisters took over the family estate, Meyer-Näkel, and its 23-hectare vineyard. Its winery, where the wine is made and stored, is in a warehouse on the banks of the Ahr.
This is red wine country. Tourists come from across Germany and the surrounding countries to hike the red wine trail, walking from village to village to drink local pinot noir, sometimes at tables in the vineyards. The hills are stubbled with vines that, from a distance, look like the quills on a porcupine. The slopes are so steep that you wonder how anyone could pick the grapes without tumbling down, yet every September the harvest is brought in without incident.
The Ahr threads its way through the villages of Schuld, Altenahr and Dernau, then Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler-the biggest town in the Ahr valley - and on to Sinzig, before joining the Rhine near Bonn.
This story is from the April 19, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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This story is from the April 19, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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