Lake Chelan AVA
The lake is named after a Native American word for “deep water.”
Key statistics
2009
269 acres
11 inches
Characteristics
About the region
This appellation wraps around the tourist-popular Lake Chelan. This is a narrow, 50.5 mile, glacier carved lake with depths up to 1,486 feet – among the deepest in the country. The average width of the lake is one mile. Lake Chelan is also at the edge of the Cascade Mountain range, with the northern end of the lake in North Cascades National Park.
Climatically, the appellation is defined by its location at the north-western edge of the Columbia Valley and the “lake effect”. Lake Chelan moderates temperatures, providing cooler summer days and warmer summer nights compared to the surrounding regions. The Lake Chelan appellation also has a somewhat higher elevation – approximately 1,100 feet above sea level – than some southern appellations within the Columbia Valley. Vineyards are located along the southern and eastern portions of the lake.
As a growing region, the Lake Chelan appellation is unique from others in eastern Washington in that it lies north of the Missoula Floods, which define the soil types of most of the Columbia Valley. Soil types here are glacial sediments along with ash and pumice from volcanoes from the nearby Cascade Range. The glacial sediments have substantial amounts of quartz and mica. Additionally, the appellation has a granitic bedrock, compared to the basalt bedrock of the rest of the Columbia Valley.
The appellation’s more northern location and moderate temperatures allow it to excel at cooler climate grapes. Lake Chelan is a young growing region, with its first modern day vinifera plantings in 1998. Like almost all of eastern Washington’s growing regions, it is a sub-appellation of the larger Columbia Valley.