My celebration trip to Portugal was wonderful. Thank you all for your advice, it certainly helped.
I will start with an overview and if people have questions I will fill in some details. I also hope to add some port notes, and some reviews of the quintas and other places we visited.
My question to all of you is... why do you say port costs more in Portugal? Everything I bought was cheaper then I can find in the Boston area. Sometimes as much as 30-40% cheaper. Where do you all buy port in the USA?
My wife and I arrived in Lisbon on June 9th at 11am. The passport line took about 3 hours

Everyone says Lisbon is amazing, and a great place to visit. I believe they are under stating the situation. 3 days in Lisbon is not enough.
I had a 10 year Quinta Da Silveira that I loved, a tawny from Ferreira that was better then expected, and a vintage 1985 from Cockburn, that was wonderful and spicy, except I spilled the last two sips.
Sintra was magical. We got the early train, and this helped us avoid a lot of the lines.
I will have to fill in the details later, but Sintra would have been worth 2 days, and we only had from 9am to 5pm.
There was a port tasting shop across the street from the National palace which appeared to have great ports. I only had 10 minutes until our train though, so I can't fully review this place. I will say I gave him a price range, and he pointed to two bottles, then had me try a port at 30% more then my price range which was clearly not worth the price he suggested. With more time I would be curious to explore some... but my expectation is that it is over priced, but with a fantastic selection (compared to Boston area)
On June 12th we got up and drove out of Lisbon, thinking to avoid most of the 20 year olds at the festival. The 9th, 10th and 11th, this festival was a lot of fun from the side lines, and I wish I had done it when I was younger. Although there were plenty of people here older then us, I suspect they were locals.
Portimao: This was a surprise. We planned to spend time in Lagos and Farro, but ended up in Porimao and not leaving much.
I do not recommend buying glasses of port here. Both of my attempts ended poorly. Although there were some bottles of port that I considered trying. I do have some tourist recommendations though if anyone is considering visiting this area.
Evora. We drove there on the hottest day of the trip. Our car thermometer said it was 42 degrees when we parked here. Very very few people on the streets, and we only had two hours to look around. Definitely worth the extra driving though.
Coimbra: What an amazing city. The University is mind blowing, the history, the hills. We only spent 20 hours here, but we want to go back. I think I drank sangria here.
Ok.... so June 15th we drove into Porto about 4pm, and got rid of the rental car. Two friends from the states arrived by train and joined us for dinner, and another friend arrived a bit after midnight. The five of us had two rooms in an Air B N B right in the middle of everything.
We saw many of the sites at Porto with fresh eyes. The only disappointment would be the book store. That was a long line for an interesting inside.... but there are lots of places with interesting insides.
Tastings.... I will have to fill in the details later, but they were so good we did more then I hoped for, but less then I researched :)
Caves Ferreira: highly recommended. We are all fans now.
Quevedo: I hope to spend quite a few words explaining how awesome this port is, and what an amazing job Fredrick does.
A fantastic restaurant recommended by Fredrick.... they had as laughing all night. I will look up the name.... Ado?
Kopke tastings. I went here to get a very old port, and succeeded. My wife and friends came with me, and we spent a lot of money. I want to buy more from them someday since everything we had was so good.... but then everything we had is out of my price range for normal living, so I'm not sure what to get...
Was the 1966 kopke actually better then the 1974 from Quevedo? or did it just cost more?
The Botanical gardens, during a beer fest :)
And on Saturday our paid tour of the Douro valley. Certainly out of our normal price range but our tour guide actually arranged a once in a lifetime tasting. I hope to type in more about this tour at length sometime next week :)
- wine tasting at Quinta da Pacheca (DOC and old Ports)
yumm! I only bought 1 bottle, but I really want more.
- wine tasting and lunch at Quinta do Bucheiro (DOC, Ports and three course meal - pre set menu)
This was essentially lunch with a wide variety of wine. I don't actually care for wine. The port was excellent but with the 30 and 40 year at Quinta da Pacheca in our minds it had a tough time competing.
- Vertical Ports tasting at Quinta do Bomfim (three Tawnys and three vintage Ports)
These are the ports I get at home. It was extremely educational, and a ton of port that we could not finish. Historically I really like these ports, but is a huge producer, and now that I have had more variety I suspect I will be drinking less of these ports in the future.
- wine tasting at Casa do Romezal - Gueda Wines (DOC and young small producer Tawny and White Ports)
This is a young winery with a lot of passion, energy and plans. We were able to talk with the wine maker, and he could answer all of the questions about soil and acidy, the skins of the grapes, and more. This visit might not be for everyone, but it is now on my bucket list to come stay here for a couple of days.
We tried some wine, and some very unique ports. more about these later.
TYM :)