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    Winery in Pemberton, Australia

    Picardy Wines

    750pts

    Karri-Country Cool-Climate

    Picardy Wines, Winery in Pemberton

    About Picardy Wines

    Picardy Wines sits on the Vasse Highway outside Pemberton, a cool-climate region that has been quietly redefining what Western Australia can produce beyond the Margaret River mainstream. The winery holds a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating for 2025, placing it among a select group of Australian producers recognised for consistent quality at the top tier. For anyone tracing the southern reaches of WA's wine country, Picardy is a reference point.

    Where Karri Country Meets Cool-Climate Conviction

    The road into Pemberton runs through karri forest so dense that daylight arrives in columns rather than sheets. By the time you reach 14545 Vasse Highway, the canopy has already made its argument: this is not Margaret River, and it was never meant to be. Pemberton sits further south, higher in elevation, and considerably cooler in growing-season temperature. Those differences are not incidental to the wines produced here. They are the whole point.

    Picardy Wines occupies this terrain in a way that feels structural rather than opportunistic. The property sits within a region that Australian wine critics and collectors have been paying closer attention to since the 1990s, when a handful of producers demonstrated that Pemberton's basalt and gravel soils, combined with its maritime-influenced cool climate, could produce Pinot Noir and Chardonnay of genuine complexity. Picardy was among the producers that helped establish that case, and the 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition reflects sustained performance rather than a single exceptional vintage.

    What Pemberton Produces, and Why It Matters

    Australian wine geography is often reduced to a shortlist of flagship regions: Barossa, McLaren Vale, Margaret River, Hunter Valley. Pemberton belongs to a different conversation, one about cool-climate precision rather than warm-climate richness. The region shares certain climatic signatures with southern Victoria's leading Pinot country, though the soils and the karri-forested topography create a local character that producers like Picardy have worked to define on its own terms, rather than in relation to Burgundy or anywhere else.

    That ambition to speak from place rather than borrow a framework is what separates the serious producers in Pemberton from those using the region as a cooler alternative to their primary operations elsewhere. Wineries that commit fully to the site, working through its cool, occasionally wet vintages rather than engineering around them, tend to produce wines with a structural tension that warmer-region equivalents rarely achieve. The tannic architecture of a cool-vintage red from this latitude, or the mineral drag through a Chardonnay grown under karri canopy, comes from specific combinations of temperature, soil drainage, and light intensity that cannot be replicated by adjusting a recipe.

    For context, [Bass Phillip in Gippsland](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/bass-phillip-gippsland-winery) operates with a similar philosophy in Victoria, committing entirely to cool-climate Pinot in a region that required decades to gain mainstream recognition. The comparison is useful not because the wines taste alike, but because the strategic logic is the same: place comes first, recognition follows. [Cape Mentelle in Margaret River](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/cape-mentelle-margaret-river-winery) represents the more established WA benchmark, but its warmer site produces wines of a different register entirely.

    The Pearl 3 Star Prestige Rating in Context

    The 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige designation places Picardy at the top tier of EP Club's recognition framework. In practical terms, this signals that the winery is performing at a level consistent with the most regarded producers in the Australian premium segment, a peer group that includes operations in regions with far greater international visibility.

    That positioning matters when you consider the broader Australian producer map. Houses like [Henschke](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/bests-wines-great-western-winery) in South Australia and [Penfolds](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/brokenwood-hunter-valley-winery) carry decades of export-market recognition that naturally inflates their profile relative to their quality. A 3 Star Prestige rating for a Pemberton producer represents performance measured against the wines rather than the marketing history. For collectors and serious visitors working through the Australian premium tier methodically, that distinction is relevant.

    Other 3 Star recipients in the EP Club framework span regions including [Brokenwood in Hunter Valley](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/brokenwood-hunter-valley-winery), [Bird in Hand in Adelaide Hills](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/bird-in-hand-adelaide-hills-winery), and [Leading's Wines in Great Western](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/bests-wines-great-western-winery). What the list demonstrates is that prestige-tier performance in Australia is distributed across climate types and soil profiles, not concentrated in any single region. Picardy's inclusion in that tier from a region as geographically specific as Pemberton reinforces the case that cool-climate WA has earned its position in the national conversation.

    How to Approach a Visit

    Pemberton sits approximately three and a half hours south of Perth by road, and the Vasse Highway route from Nannup or Manjimup passes through landscape that functions as its own orientation: by the time you arrive, the drive has already communicated something about the scale and character of the region. The town is small, and wine tourism infrastructure here operates at a different pace than in the Margaret River corridor further north. That is not a shortcoming. It is part of the proposition.

    Visiting Picardy works leading as a considered itinerary rather than a passing stop. The region rewards those who arrive with enough time to engage with more than one producer, and to understand how the wines relate to the landscape rather than simply tasting them in isolation. Booking ahead is advisable; contact details are leading confirmed through current channels, as the property operates at boutique scale. Those travelling from Perth who want to combine the visit with other high-recognition Western Australian producers should note that [Cape Mentelle in Margaret River](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/cape-mentelle-margaret-river-winery) sits closer to the Perth-to-Pemberton route, making a staged itinerary practical.

    For visitors exploring the broader Australian premium winery circuit, the [EP Club Pemberton guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/cities/pemberton) maps the region's producers against each other, and cross-referencing with operations in other states, including [All Saints Estate in Rutherglen](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/all-saints-estate-rutherglen-winery), [Angove Family Winemakers in Renmark](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/angove-family-winemakers-renmark-winery), [Blue Pyrenees Estate in Pyrenees](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/blue-pyrenees-estate-pyrenees-winery), [Brown Brothers in King Valley](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/brown-brothers-king-valley-winery), and [Archie Rose Distilling Co in Sydney](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/archie-rose-distilling-co-sydney-winery), gives useful scale to how different regional identities operate within the national premium tier.

    The Case for Cool-Climate WA

    Western Australia's wine story is told, internationally at least, almost entirely through Margaret River. The concentration of critical attention on that region has created a structural blind spot around what lies further south. Pemberton, Manjimup, and the broader Great Southern zone produce wines that sit in a different register, cooler and more structurally austere, that appeal to a different palate than the textured Cabernets and Chardonnays that made Margaret River's reputation.

    Picardy represents the argument for that southern tier in its most committed form. The Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating for 2025 confirms what the region's supporters have maintained for years: that terroir this specific, worked with enough patience, produces wines that do not need to be understood through comparison with anywhere else. They make their own case from the ground up, through the karri-shaded slopes and basalt soils of one of Australia's least-exported but most quietly serious wine regions.

    For visitors who have covered the more familiar stops on the Australian premium circuit, from [Casella Family in Griffith](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/casella-family-yellow-tail-griffith-winery) to [Bundaberg Rum Distillery in Bundaberg](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/bundaberg-rum-distillery-bundaberg-winery) to international benchmarks like [Aberlour in Aberlour](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/aberlour-aberlour-winery) or [Accendo Cellars in St. Helena](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/accendo-cellars), Pemberton and Picardy specifically offer something that the well-documented regions cannot: the particular quality of a place still being understood on its own terms.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How would you describe the overall feel of Picardy Wines?
    Picardy operates in a register common to serious cool-climate producers: focused, site-specific, and more interested in what the land produces than in broad hospitality spectacle. The Pemberton setting, karri forest, refined terrain, and a climate that demands patience from both grower and visitor, sets the tone before you arrive. The 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition places it among Australia's prestige-tier producers, which signals a level of quality commitment that shapes the experience at every point. Pricing and format details are leading confirmed directly with the property before visiting.
    What should I taste at Picardy Wines?
    Pemberton's cool climate makes it one of the more credible addresses in Western Australia for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, the varieties that benefit most from the region's lower temperatures and well-drained basalt soils. Picardy has been among the producers building the case for those varieties in this region since the early years of Pemberton's development as a serious wine zone. The winery's Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating suggests consistent quality across the range; specific current releases and tasting options should be confirmed through direct contact or the EP Club Pemberton guide.
    What's the main draw of Picardy Wines?
    The primary draw is the combination of regional specificity and verified prestige-tier performance. Pemberton is not a region you visit by accident, and Picardy is not a producer that has gained recognition through volume or visibility. The 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige designation, set against the modest international profile of the region, signals exactly the kind of quality-to-attention ratio that serious wine travellers seek out. For those building an itinerary around premium Australian producers rather than familiar names, Picardy and the Pemberton region offer depth that the more-visited western Australian zones cannot replicate.
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