Joseph Swan Vineyards
One of the founding estates of Russian River Valley Pinot Noir. Joe Swan planted his estate in 1967 at the urging of Andre Tchelistcheff, set the template for cool-climate winemaking in Sonoma County, and mentored a generation of California winemakers — including Joel Peterson of Ravenswood.
Joseph Swan Vineyards sits on Laguna Road in Forestville, on the 13-acre property that Joseph Swan purchased in 1967 and transformed into one of the foundational estates of Russian River Valley winemaking. Joe Swan was an airline pilot and self-taught enologist who replanted his vineyard with Pinot Noir and Chardonnay at the urging of his friend and mentor Andre Tchelistcheff, the legendary winemaker who had more influence on California wine than almost anyone else of his era. Those early plantings established what would become one of the region’s most historically significant vineyards, and the winery continues today under the ownership of Rod and Lynn Berglund.
Joe Swan: airline pilot, painter, and pioneer winemaker
Joseph Swan grew up in North Dakota as the son of teetotaler parents, one of whom was a member of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union. In an unlikely beginning, he read about wine as a teenager and became fascinated enough to attempt his first winemaking using rhubarb from the family garden and his mother’s washing machine. That early experiment did not produce anything notable, but the curiosity it sparked never faded.
Joe became a pilot, teaching flying to the Army Air Corps during World War II before joining Western Airlines as a commercial pilot. He also worked as an artist, contributing to WPA murals during the Depression. Through all of it, his interest in wine grew. He visited the enology and viticulture department at UC Davis after the war, made Zinfandel from locally grown grapes while based in Salt Lake City, and eventually purchased a small vineyard in the Sierra foothills before setting his sights on something larger. In 1967, he bought the Laguna Road property in Forestville, Sonoma County.
Joe Swan planted the template for Russian River Valley Pinot Noir. Rod Berglund has honored it for more than four decades.
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Start the quizAndre Tchelistcheff, Joel Peterson, and the making of a legacy
The 13 acres Joe Swan purchased in 1967 already had old Zinfandel vines, fruit trees, and a farmhouse that had once served as the post office for the village of Trenton. Joe made wine from the existing Zinfandel in 1968. Then, at the specific urging of his friend Andre Tchelistcheff — the Beaulieu Vineyard winemaker who had mentored several generations of California winemakers — Joe replanted much of the property with cool-climate varieties, primarily Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.
The reputation that followed was significant. In 1974, Joe and a group of friends — including a young Joel Peterson — built what the winery now calls “the tin shed,” a simple but functional production space. In 1976, Peterson made his first Ravenswood wines at the Swan property, a fact that places Joseph Swan Vineyards at the literal origin point of one of California’s most influential Zinfandel producers. Joe was a frequent lecturer at UC Davis despite having no formal training, and he mentored winemakers who would go on to define the generation.
Rod and Lynn Berglund: continuing the Swan legacy
Joe Swan’s last harvest was 1987. He passed away in January 1989. His legacy was carried forward by Rod Berglund, who had become a winemaker in 1979 partly because of Joe’s encouragement and who married Joe’s daughter Lynn in 1986, becoming Joe’s son-in-law and helping with the 1987 harvest.
Rod and Lynn Berglund have run Joseph Swan Vineyards continuously since, maintaining the approach that Joe established: small production, low yields, careful farming, and a focus on letting the vineyard express itself without heavy intervention. The winery produces more than 25 wines each year from Pinot Noir, Zinfandel, and Chardonnay, reflecting both the estate’s heritage varietals and the range of the Russian River Valley. Six wines are typically available for tasting, giving visitors a meaningful sample of the lineup without overwhelming the experience.
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Find your pairingPairing Joseph Swan wines with food
The wines produced at Joseph Swan Vineyards reflect the cool, fog-influenced growing conditions of the Russian River Valley west of Forestville, where marine air from the Pacific keeps temperatures moderate and extends the growing season. Pinot Noir from this environment carries high natural acidity, restrained tannin, and earthy complexity that makes it among the most food-compatible red wines produced anywhere.
Acidity in wine acts as a palate cleanser — it dissolves surface fat molecules and prepares the palate for the next bite, which is why high-acid wines like cool-climate Pinot Noir pair effectively across a wide range of dishes. Salmon, duck confit, roasted chicken, mushroom preparations, and aged semi-firm cheeses all complement the structure of Swan Pinot Noir. The estate Zinfandel, made from the heritage blocks that trace back to Joe Swan’s original planting, calls for heartier pairings: braised meats, grilled lamb, strong cheeses, and slow-cooked dishes where the wine’s concentration and spice find an equal.
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