
Bright, focused Pinot Noir from the ancient seabeds of the Santa Cruz Mountains

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2024 Madson Wines Pinot Noir Santa Cruz Mountains 750 ml
| $36 | per bottle | |
- Curated by unrivaled experts
- Choose your delivery date
- Temperature controlled shipping options
- Get credited back if a wine fails to impress
The Mountain Makes the Wine
The 2024 Madson Wines Pinot Noir Santa Cruz Mountains is a light-bodied, tautly focused wine of genuine complexity—bright, crunchy red fruit, brisk mountain acidity, and a linear structure with savory edges of forest floor and black tea. It is precisely the kind of Pinot Noir that the Santa Cruz Mountains, at their best, seem almost designed to produce.
That design starts with place. Of the 300,000-plus acres that make up the Santa Cruz Mountains AVA, fewer than 2,000 are planted to vines. It was the first California AVA established on purely topographic grounds, its boundaries drawn by the mountains themselves rather than any political border. Monterey Bay fog moderates temperatures and slows ripening to a degree nearly impossible to replicate elsewhere in California. The soils are ancient marine sediment—seabed pushed upright by tectonic collision—high in calcium, constitutionally opposed to producing overripe fruit.
Madson Wines was founded in 2018 by Cole Thomas, viticulturist Ken Swegles, and Abbey Chrystal. Thomas came to winemaking through organic farming and seed conservation, discovering viticulture at Santa Cruz Mountain Vineyard under Jeff Emery before stages in Mornington Peninsula and Central Otago—the latter at Prophet’s Rock and Amisfield, where he absorbed the restrained, site-first philosophy that defines Madson today. Swegles farms virtually all of the winery’s fruit through Rhizos Viticulture, running organic programs across more than 50 vineyards in the AVA.
This appellation cuvée draws from several small organically farmed sites—Toyon, Branciforte, and Chamise among them—selected in part for their ability to retain acid through ripening. A heavy dose of whole-cluster fermentation, spontaneous native yeast, and aging in predominantly neutral French oak keep the cellar’s presence as light as possible. What you taste is the fruit, the mountains, and the fog.
The 2024 vintage delivered the kind of conditions the team had been waiting for. After two difficult, late-harvest years, a warm and even-ripening summer brought clean, healthy fruit—harvest arriving nearly two months earlier than in 2023, with unusually low disease pressure throughout the mountains. For a winery built around transparency and precision, it was a near-ideal growing year.
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