REVIEW · MENDOZA
Mendoza: El Enemigo and Casa Vigil Wine Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Futuro Travels · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Wine in Mendoza with a Dante twist. This tour pairs Casa Vigil (El Enemigo) with a guide-led look at how the Vigil family connects their wines to Dante’s Divine Comedy, plus the sweeping Mendoza setting that makes the whole day feel like more than a tasting. I especially like that the visit is led with an expert local guide and focused on unique terroirs and wines, not just pouring and walking.
One possible drawback: the info you’ll see around lunch and wine tasting is a little mixed—your Casa Vigil stop is described as including lunch and tasting time, while the activity details also label lunch and wine tasting as not included. Before you go, it’s smart to confirm exactly what your price covers.
In This Review
- Key Points That Matter
- Casa Vigil and El Enemigo: What Makes This Mendoza Stop Different
- Price and What $109 Buys You (Value, Not Just Cost)
- The 4.5-Hour Flow: How the Day Actually Feels
- Picking Up in Mendoza: Vehicles, Comfort, and Peace of Mind
- Inside Casa Vigil (El Enemigo): Architecture, Art, and the Dante Thread
- Wines and Terroirs: What the Guide Helps You Appreciate
- Food and Wine: Timing Notes (and the One Thing to Confirm)
- Service Quality: What the Solid Rating Signals
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want Something Else)
- Small Practical Tips Before You Go
- Should You Book This Mendoza El Enemigo and Casa Vigil Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Mendoza El Enemigo and Casa Vigil wine tour?
- Where does the tour pick up?
- How long do we spend at Casa Vigil?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What languages are available for the live guide?
- Do I need to arrange reservations or logistics?
- Is insurance included?
- Is lunch included?
- Is wine tasting included?
- Does the tour include skip-the-ticket-line access?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Key Points That Matter

- Casa Vigil (El Enemigo) is framed through Dante’s Divine Comedy—you’re drinking with context, not just samples.
- Expert local guidance is part of the experience, with attention to Mendoza wines and terroirs.
- Modern hotel pickup and drop-off in latest-generation vehicles keeps logistics easy.
- A 3-hour winery block gives you time for the architecture, story, and tastings without feeling rushed.
- Languages include Spanish, Portuguese, and English, so you can match your comfort level.
- Strong customer scoring (4.5/5 from 8 reviews) points to consistently good service and a satisfying food-and-wine experience.
Casa Vigil and El Enemigo: What Makes This Mendoza Stop Different

Casa Vigil isn’t presented like a generic “tasting room” experience. It’s built as a whole atmosphere. The winery’s architecture and artwork are tied to a personal narrative that echoes Dante’s Divine Comedy, with the Vigil family’s memories and farming/land knowledge woven into the way they talk about wine. The effect is that you’re not only tasting bottles—you’re also being guided through the meaning behind them.
A big part of the pull is the story behind the name and theme. The experience references Alejandro, who connects his childhood around his maternal grandfather Tristán (an Italian immigrant) to the way verses from Dante’s work traveled through family life. That family thread turns into something you’ll feel during your visit: the idea that returning to the Divine Comedy is a poetic homage to roots and to the land. In other words, you’ll likely hear wine language paired with human and cultural details—Mendoza’s landscapes plus a literary lens.
You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Mendoza
Price and What $109 Buys You (Value, Not Just Cost)

At $109 per person for about 4.5 hours, you’re paying for more than a tasting. What you’re really buying is time structure and support: hotel pickup/drop-off, a live guide, reservations/logistics handled, and insurance included. That matters in Mendoza because the “wine day” can turn into a headache if you have to manage transport, timing, and on-the-ground coordination yourself.
So where is the value?
- Transportation is handled: you don’t have to wrestle with schedules or a car after drinking wine.
- A guide is included: you’re not just sampling; you’re getting interpretation about Mendoza wine and terroirs.
- Everything is organized: the tour includes reservations and logistics, which reduces the friction of doing this solo.
- You get a full winery visit window: the Casa Vigil stop is listed as 3 hours, which is a decent amount of time to absorb the place and not feel like you’re in a queue.
One caution on value: since the details also mention that lunch and wine tasting aren’t included, you need to confirm what your exact package includes. If your option does include lunch and tastings, then this price feels more like a complete “day activity.” If not, you’ll want to budget additional meals or tasting costs.
The 4.5-Hour Flow: How the Day Actually Feels

This is not an all-day marathon. You should expect a compact “winery-and-go” structure designed for people who want a good Mendoza wine hit without burning the entire day.
Here’s the rhythm:
- You start with pickup in Mendoza.
- You spend your main time at Casa Vigil (El Enemigo) for about 3 hours.
- Then you return to Mendoza for drop-off.
Why this timing works: a 4.5-hour tour is long enough to feel like you did something meaningful, but short enough that you can still plan dinner afterward. It also helps if you have limited days in Mendoza or you’re pairing this with another activity (like exploring the city center or a second wine stop).
Picking Up in Mendoza: Vehicles, Comfort, and Peace of Mind
The tour includes hotel pickup and drop-off using latest-generation vehicles, plus insurance. That’s a practical win. In wine country, the biggest quality-of-life issue is often transport—getting where you need to go, returning safely, and not losing your day to delays.
Also, the tour notes skip the ticket line, which usually means you spend less time stuck at check-in. That’s helpful if you’re aiming to use every minute during the 3-hour winery block.
Language support is another comfort factor: you can get the live guide in Spanish, Portuguese, or English. If your Spanish is limited (or your English is comfortable but you’re tired of guessing), this helps you get the story and the wine explanations without missing the key points.
Inside Casa Vigil (El Enemigo): Architecture, Art, and the Dante Thread
Your main stop is Casa Vigil—called El Enemigo in the tour title—and it’s described as an experience built around mood and meaning. Here’s what that tends to look like during your visit, based on how the experience is framed:
You’ll start encountering the setting: inviting architecture, sweeping vistas, and captivating artwork. The tour’s language leans into the feeling of being guided through a personal “world” created by the Vigil family. That includes the idea that the winery experience recreates passages from Dante’s Divine Comedy through the family’s own perspective—so the visuals and storytelling are meant to line up with the theme.
You’ll also hear how family mentorship and land study fit into the story. The experience specifically mentions a path intertwined with nature and learning about the land, taught through Tristán (the grandfather figure in the narrative). Practically, that means you’re likely to leave with a better sense of why these wines taste the way they do—at least in terms of what the family wants you to notice about their vineyards and approach.
Wines and Terroirs: What the Guide Helps You Appreciate
The tour promises exploration of unique wines & terroirs in Mendoza with an expert local guide. That’s the part I’d prioritize, because terroir is where a wine day becomes memorable beyond the flavor.
Even if you’re not a “wine expert,” a good guide turns tasting into learning:
- You start noticing differences, instead of treating all reds like they’re the same.
- You get a language for what you’re tasting (origin, conditions, style choices).
- You learn what to ask or look for later when you’re shopping.
The experience also frames the tasting within the family’s “dreamlike world” governed by senses and emotions. That doesn’t replace wine science, but it’s useful because it gives you a reason to pay attention—texture, aroma, and how the family wants you to interpret the wines.
Food and Wine: Timing Notes (and the One Thing to Confirm)

Here’s the one spot where you should be a little careful. The Casa Vigil stop is described as Visit, Lunch, Wine tasting for 3 hours, which sounds complete. But the activity details also list Lunch and Wine Tasting as not included.
What should you do?
- Before you lock it in, confirm whether lunch and wine tasting are included in your specific booking price.
- If they’re not included, ask what is typically available on-site and whether lunch can be purchased as part of the winery experience.
Why I’m pushing this: food is often part of the “value equation” for wine tours. One of the strongest notes in the provided feedback is that the food and wine samples were enjoyed and the service was excellent. If your option ends up not covering lunch/tasting, the experience might still be good—but you’ll want to know what you’ll have to pay separately.
Service Quality: What the Solid Rating Signals

The experience is rated 4.5 out of 5 based on 8 reviews. When you see that kind of scoring with a small review count, it often means the operation is doing the basics well—timing, communication, and the guide presence.
The feedback highlights two themes:
- Food and wine samples land well.
- Service is consistently described as excellent.
That combination usually translates into a tour where you feel taken care of during the winery stop, not rushed, and not left figuring things out yourself. That’s exactly what you want on a short 4.5-hour itinerary where your time at the winery is the main event.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want Something Else)
This is a great match if:
- You want a Mendoza wine experience with guided storytelling, not just a self-guided tasting.
- You like the idea of a theme that connects wine to culture and place (the Dante Divine Comedy angle).
- You’re working with a half-day schedule and want a clean plan: pickup, 3 hours at the winery, drop-off.
- You value modern transport and handled logistics.
You might consider a different option if:
- You’re the type who wants multiple wineries in one day. This is centered on Casa Vigil as the main stop.
- You want certainty that lunch and tastings are definitely covered. With the info currently showing a mismatch, you’ll want to confirm what your package includes.
Small Practical Tips Before You Go
Based on how this kind of winery visit tends to work (and what’s mentioned in the description), a few small moves can make your day smoother:
- Eat a light snack before pickup only if you’re waiting on confirmation about lunch. If lunch is included, you’re set.
- Bring a light layer, especially if you’re sensitive to temperature changes around vineyards and views.
- If you care about understanding your tasting, ask your guide for clarification on the wine and terroir points—this tour is structured around learning, so use the time.
Should You Book This Mendoza El Enemigo and Casa Vigil Tour?
I’d book it if you want a guided, story-driven winery stop at Casa Vigil with a strong focus on Mendoza wines and terroirs, plus pickup and drop-off that keep the day simple. The theme tied to Dante’s Divine Comedy is more than decoration; it’s a way of organizing what you notice during the visit—architecture, art, and then the wine with meaning.
The only reason I’d hesitate is the lunch/tasting inclusion confusion. If you confirm that your booking covers lunch and the tasting portion (or you know what you’ll pay separately), this looks like a very solid half-day wine plan with good service feedback and a manageable schedule.
If you want, paste the exact booking details you see (especially the line about lunch/tasting). I’ll help you interpret whether what you’re buying matches the 3-hour Casa Vigil experience described.
FAQ
How long is the Mendoza El Enemigo and Casa Vigil wine tour?
The duration is listed as 4.5 hours.
Where does the tour pick up?
Pickup is listed as being from Mendoza.
How long do we spend at Casa Vigil?
Your main stop at Casa Vigil is described as 3 hours.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. Hotel pickup and drop-off are included.
What languages are available for the live guide?
The guide is listed as available in Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
Do I need to arrange reservations or logistics?
No. The tour includes all reservations and logistics.
Is insurance included?
Yes. Insurance is included.
Is lunch included?
The information is mixed: the Casa Vigil stop is described as including lunch, but the activity details also list lunch as not included. Confirm what’s included for your exact booking option.
Is wine tasting included?
Same issue as lunch: the Casa Vigil stop is described as including wine tasting, but the activity details list wine tasting as not included. Check your confirmation details.
Does the tour include skip-the-ticket-line access?
Yes. Skip the ticket line is listed as included.
What’s the cancellation policy?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.



























