Blood on the Werkstatt floor: The story of a heart-breaking winery accident

Few things in our lives have quite the power to unhinge us quite like a telephone call. The best moments of my life, and the worst, have often occurred down the invisible line. I thought of this yesterday, after I’d received an email from Bridget Mac, the creative force behind the esteemed wine name, Werkstatt. Bridget Mac learned recently, after she’d picked up her phone, that the prized jewel of her 2025 vintage – her 2025 Werkstatt Mount Gambier Pinot Noir – had been destroyed in a winery accident. Bridget Mac only makes one red wine each year, and this was it. The value of the loss was in the vicinity of $150,000, which for a tiny producer is a monstrous sum. Mac described herself, because of this news, as being “gutted”. The wine itself had only been collected, in tank, two days prior to the accident. It was collected in this tank because it was due to be bottled the following week. This tiny window of time was enough for an errant forklift to puncture the tank. The sight of all those litres of beautiful red wine gushing from the tank, and onto the concrete floor, was eventually mirrored by the blood rushing away from Mac’s head when she heard the news.

“The person who reversed into my tank with the forklift, called me (I was at home). I almost fainted, and needed to sit down. It was an intense feeling, learning that your work and art was on the floor, and (in the) drain of the winery.”

There’s a moment, in the play Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen, when the character Hedda takes an unpublished manuscript – a manuscript so prized by its authors that it is described as their “child” – and tosses it into the fire of a open fireplace. There was no back-up copy. In all the books, poems, plays and scripts I’ve read in my life, that moment ranks as one of less than a handful that made me gasp out loud. I thought of this Hedda Gabler moment when I heard of Bridget Mac’s story. I’ve not met Bridget Mac. I’m not properly familiar with her wines. But something beautiful, and irrecoverable, and unique – that Bridget had invested her heart and soul into – has not only been lost, but has been taken from our experience of the world.

There is no back-up copy.

I didn’t shed at first. But then I went to the GoFundMe page that has been set up to help Bridget Mac’s wine business survive. The first words that come out of a person when they first open the vein are often the most telling. When Bridget Mac began to write for the GoFundMe site she started by saying, simply, this: “I am crippled with grief”.

This event, to get into the pragmatics, has put one of the brightest wine businesses in all of our brown land in jeopardy. Mac, who was a visual artist in Berlin for a period and who, originally, was inspired by the beauty that is great German riesling – before working, in Australia, for Lethbridge, and Jim Chatto, and Mel Chester no less – is considered one of Australian wine’s fastest risers. Very few people can make wine of such beauty that it stops people in their tracks; Bridget Mac’s Wersktatt riesling regularly has that ability. Indeed Mike Bennie, who never hands out high scores easily, has reviewed ten of Bridget Mac’s Werkstatt wines on The Winefront site over the past few years, and every single one of them has scored stellar.

“I make small batches with intense care,” Bridget Mac writes. At this point it’s worth noting that the word Werstatt translates to workshop, which to me says something of the bare exposed bones of this winemaking project. “This wine was by far the most substantial amount I have made to date, and easily the most costly to produce. I was hoping to finally break even, pay myself a wage, and share this special vintage beyond the core fans and restaurants who already love it,” Bridget Mac writes.

The GoFundMe page to help the Werkstatt winery survive is here.

The Australian wine community likes to think of itself as a generous collective soul. If ever there was a time to prove it, now is it.

This article is provided for free, as a service for consumers. There are no kick backs from wineries or retailers. Buy me a Coffee.


Campbell Mattinson is the founder of The Winefront business and is the former chief editor of Halliday Wine Companion. He’s published five books on wine, four of them bestsellers. He’s the only person to have won the Australian Wine Communicator of the Year Award more than once.

 
Campbell Mattinson

This post was written by Campbell Mattinson. Mattinson is a former chief editor of the Halliday Wine Companion book, former editor of Halliday magazine, former editor of Australian Sommelier Magazine and founder of The Winefront business. He is the author of five books on wine – four of which were bestsellers (The Wine Hunter, the Big Red Wine Book 2008, the Big Red Wine Book 2009, and the Big Red Wine Book 2010).

Mattinson is also the founder of the Mattinson Photography business.

Campbell Mattinson has been an independent journalist, wine critic and photographer for forty years. He’s the only Australian to have won the Australian Wine Communicator of the Year Award more than once. He’s a past winner of a Louis Roederer International Wine Media Award; is the author of the award-winning book The Wine Hunter; and is the author of the best-selling novel We Were Not Men. He’s also a winner of a St Kilda Film Festival Award (as writer-director) and is a former winner of the national Best Australian Sports Writing Award. In 2026 three of his photographs were short-listed for the World Food Photography Awards.

Campbell Mattinson, who is 100% independent, has tasted between 5000 and 10,000 wines each and every year for the past 25 years. He tastes blind, in comparative brackets, as often as is practicable.

Campbell Mattinson is a journalist, a photographer, a filmmaker and a wine critic. In all of these mediums his prime motive is to tell people's stories.

https://www.campbellmattinson.com
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