Why Bordeaux needs a local guide
Wine is the obvious hook, but Bordeaux has reinvented itself. The Miroir d'Eau reflects a city that went from grey to golden. Saint-Michel is the real neighborhood — North African grocers next to antique dealers. The Cité du Vin is impressive but the real wine education happens in Saint-Émilion, 40 minutes east.
Bordeaux draws around seven million visitors a year and the number keeps climbing since the city scrubbed its limestone facades and built the TGV line that puts Paris two hours away. Most visitors photograph the Miroir d'Eau, walk the rue Sainte-Catherine, and take a day trip to Saint-Emilion. What they miss is the Saint-Michel quarter where the Monday flea market spills around the basilica, or the Chartrons neighborhood where independent wine merchants have been trading since the 18th century. To become a tour guide in Bordeaux means working at the intersection of wine, architecture, and a city that transformed itself from a grey port to a UNESCO site in a single generation. The Marche des Capucins on Sunday — oysters and white wine at ten in the morning — is a scene that sells itself. If you become a tour guide in Bordeaux, the wine tourism alone sustains a full calendar: Medoc, Saint-Emilion, Pessac-Leognan, Graves, each with a different story. But the guides who last are the ones who also know why the Grand Theatre matters and what happened on the quays during the slave trade. Becoming a tour guide in Bordeaux right now means entering a market that has grown forty percent in a decade with guide supply lagging well behind.