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How Conservation Is Influencing the Next Generation of Margaret River Wineries



You can feel something shift the moment you drive into Margaret River. The air cools a little, the trees lift above you like old friends, and the vineyards stretch across the landscape in a way that feels both wild and intentional. People arrive for the wine, but plenty leave talking about the land itself. That connection has become the heartbeat of the region and is quietly reshaping how wineries imagine their future.

This part of the southwest is shaped by its coastal climate, long growing seasons, and varied geology. Vineyards sit beside karri forests, coastal scrublands, granite outcrops above, and the limestone caves threaded beneath the ground. The scenery is as compelling to visitors as the wines created here. These natural features influence how fruit grows, how vines behave, and, in subtle ways, how each wine feels in the glass. As generous as the landscape is, it also depends on ongoing care. That's where the conservation focus began to build momentum.

From Pastoral Roots to a New Wave of Margaret River Wineries

Margaret River's wine story is surprisingly young. The first vines appeared in the late 1960s when a small group of determined pioneers recognised the potential of the area's soils and climate for premium wine. Many of these wineries have lasted up to the present day, remaining influential as prominent leaders in the Australian wine industry. Dr Tom Cullity initially established Vasse Felix in 1967, setting the benchmark for Cabernet with Cape Mentelle soon following, and helping to shift the region from pastoral farmland to one of Australia's most respected wine regions.

Those early plantings sparked a movement defined by curiosity and a willingness to push boundaries. As the first generation laid the groundwork through craftsmanship and careful site selection, a new generation of Margaret River wineries is now expanding the region's identity with a broader focus that includes environmental stewardship.

This shift is driven by both climate realities and changing visitor expectations. Travellers want to know how landscapes are being protected. They want wineries that take responsibility for the land that supports them. Many producers have responded by integrating conservation into the way they farm, host guests, and shape their long-term plans.

Conservation in Margaret River has become a practical response to seasonal pressures, altered rainfall patterns, and strain on native wildlife. Wineries committed to this path are finding that the long-term health of their vineyards is closely connected to the health of the surrounding environment. Local efforts, which have included replanting native vegetation, soil stabilisation, and restoring waterways have all helped repair wildlife corridors and reintroduce natural balance to areas previously cleared for agriculture. These projects also offer visitors a deeper understanding of the region's ecology.

A number of estates now include elements of environmental interpretation in their visitor experiences. Wildlife observation points, educational tastings, and small interpretive trails help guests understand the broader landscape, not just the wine that comes from it. As eco-aware tourism continues to grow, this approach resonates strongly.

Passel Estate’s Conservation Efforts

Among the wineries driving this evolution is Passel Estate, a small, local leading Margaret River winery known the conservation at the core of its identity. From the very beginning, Passel Estate has emphasised protecting the established habitats and native flora and fauna already present on the property, including the many species threatened by the Margaret River bushfires of 2011. Following the fires and upon acquiring the property, owners Wendy and Barry Stimpson provided refuge for displaced wildlife in a moment that became the foundation of the estate's long-term conservation work.

Passel Estate integrates environmental care into day-to-day operations. Native vegetation corridors, targeted habitat protection, and low-impact land management influence how vines are planted and how visitors experience the site. These commitments are not side projects. They are part of the estate's identity.

The Western Ringtail Possum is one species in particular that sits at the heart of this work. The estate’s name, "Passel," refers to a group of possums, which reflects the significance of the species to the owners and their land. The Western Ringtail Possum is critically endangered, with an estimated five to eight thousand individuals remaining in the wild due to habitat loss, predation, and landscape fragmentation. After the 2011 fires, the Stimpsons established protected sanctuary areas to support recovery and long-term survival for the local possums, with these sanctuary zones offering dense canopies and food sources that the species depends on.

Soft-release enclosures allow rehabilitated juveniles to adapt gradually before moving into the broader sanctuary environment. The work supports multiple generations of possums and demonstrates a clear understanding that vineyards thrive within a living, interdependent landscape.

The Bigger Picture: How a New Wave Is Redefining a Wine Region

The work at Passel Estate reflects a wider movement among Margaret River wineries that want to build something lasting. The focus remains on producing world-acclaimed wines, but it is paired with a commitment to protecting the landscapes that make those wines possible. Visitors appreciate this depth. Many enjoy learning how wine and wildlife intersect, and how the region benefits environmentally and economically when wineries take the long view.

Looking ahead, several themes are likely to shape the next decade in Margaret River:

  • Habitat restoration through vineyard corridors
  • Continued support for endangered species such as the Western Ringtail Possum
  • Growth in eco-aware tourism
  • Visitor experiences that link wine to place
  • A stronger regional identity shaped by care as well as craft

As more producers adopt these principles, the region's character continues to evolve. Wineries now invite visitors to appreciate ecology as much as enology. Sanctuary spaces and conservation programs create a layered experience of place, deepening the connection between the land and the wine it supports.

In this way, the new wave of Margaret River wineries is not simply following in the footsteps of the pioneers. They are redefining what it means to be a wine region in a changing world and ensuring that Margaret River's future remains as remarkable as its past.

You could say the next chapter of Margaret River blends two things: exceptional wine and thoughtful stewardship. They're already linked, whether we notice it or not. The land shapes the wine, and the people shape the land. That relationship carries a great deal of heart.

So the real question becomes: what kind of wine region does Margaret River want to be twenty years from now? All signs point toward a place that produces more than beautiful Cabernet and Chardonnay. A place that protects the stories, species and landscapes that give those wines their meaning.

And that feels like a future worth raising a glass to.

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