UPDATE: The Water Lantern Festival has cancelled this event, and promises refunds to ticket-holders.
If you’ve seen the movie Tangled, you’ll be familiar with the whimsical scene in which Rapunzel releases floating lanterns into the sky, symbolising her deep hope and dream of seeing the lights up close. The Water Lantern Festival might just be the next best thing with participants having the opportunity to release lanterns into the water, carrying their hopes, dreams, or personal messages.
Rivers will glow in a visually stunning display. (Image: Water Lantern Festival)
Inspired by traditional lantern festivals in China, Vietnam, and Thailand, The Water Lantern Festival aims to help people create lasting memories with their loved ones in a peaceful, visually stunning setting. Upon arrival, participants will receive a lantern and a marker or pen to personalise and decorate it. The lanterns will then be lit and released across a body of water, allowing everyone to symbolically let go of their wishes, thoughts, or reflections. The striking sight that follows is a sea of lanterns floating gracefully in the dark, creating a mesmerising and peaceful atmosphere. This family-friendly event will also include activities, food trucks, music and giveaways.
Participants can symbolically let go of their wishes, thoughts, or reflections. (Image: Water Lantern Festival)
Each adult ticket provides entry into the festival area and comes with a floating lantern, commemorative drawstring bag, LED light, marker, conversation cards, playing cards, and wristband. The lanterns are made from sustainable materials, with a rice paper cover and a wooden lantern base, LED lights are recycled where possible, and event organisers have ensured no waste will be left behind in the water.
The Water Lantern Festival will make its tour around Australia from March:
Rachael Thompson is Australian Traveller's Evergreen Editor and Hotel Addict. She's responsible for the foundational content on AustralianTraveller.com, helping to manage and grow the brand’s destination guides. With a background in design and travel media, Rachael is dedicated to curating content that is as much informational as it is beautiful. She began her career at Belle magazine, before taking up editorial roles at Homes to Love and Bed Threads. When she's not writing, editing or optimising content, Rachael enjoys exploring the city's newest restaurants, bars and hotels. Next on her Aussie travel wish list is Lord Howe Island.
From geothermal pools and luxury spa sanctuaries, Victoria’s mineral-rich waters and restorative landscapes offer total renewal.
I pass waving coastal spear-grass and coast saltbush as I follow the curving path through 15 hectares of thoughtfully curated gardens at the Mornington Peninsula’s Alba Thermal Springs & Spa. I hang my robe at the entrance and slip into the first sunken geothermal pool I find – feeling the tension from the 90-minute drive from Melbourne melt away as I watch steam dance across the surface in the late afternoon light. There are 31 pools, a mix of geothermal, cold plunge and botanical, that range in temperature and design, spread over six regions.
Alba Thermal Springs & Spa on the Mornington Peninsula. (Image: Visit Victoria)
I gravitate toward The Hemisphere, with its dry sauna, steam room, cold plunge and dreamy open-air pool called The Hide. But it’s Alba’s brand-new Sanctuary that really elevates the experience. The five luxurious stand-alone villas and two additional studio rooms opened in June 2025 and feature an indoor fireplace, oversized bathtub with views across the bay, a deck and extensive all-inclusive (minus the cocktails) mini-bar.
After dining at Alba’s Thyme restaurant, I return to my villa, content to fall asleep early listening to the fire crackle, feeling thoroughly restored. While Alba is one of the newest in the region, it’s certainly not the only place to enjoy a soothing soak. Here are others to book for a wellness weekend.
Hepburn Bathhouse & Spa
The marble private bathing room is one of five new designs. (Image: Supplied)
Nestled in the Daylesford region, Hepburn Bathhouse & Spa has been welcoming guests to its historic bathhouse for 130 years. With a $1.7 million renovation now complete (part of the 21st season of Channel 9’s The Block), find five new private bathing rooms, an apothecary experience where guests blend a custom body scrub and all-new spa treatment menu.
There are three bathing areas: Bathhouse for communal bathing for all ages, adults-only Sanctuary and a private bathing space for a personalised experience – try the skin-softening Mineral Milk Bath.
Lake House Daylesford
The main pool at Lake House Daylesford. (Image: Visit Victoria)
Inciting deep exhales, the spa at Alla Wolf-Tasker’s iconic Lake House has long been a beacon of wellness in the region. Tucked into the cottage gardens that wind down to the lake’s edge, the spa is beautifully and deliberately cloistered away from guests and diners visiting the celebrated on-site restaurant.
From Ayurvedic facials and hydrotherapy that makes use of Daylesford’s mineral waters, to cocooning thermal rituals and massage, treatments here promote tranquillity. While a day spa experience is delightful on its own, staying on the property adds a luxe layer to your corporeal renewal, especially if you’re in your own private spa villa.
Metung Hot Springs
Glamping tents at Metung Hot Springs. (Image: Emily Godfrey)
Imagine immersing yourself in a barrel overflowing with geothermal water, all while taking in views of Gippsland Lakes. It’s one of several unique bathing experiences available at Metung Hot Springs.
There’s also a floating sauna and a Reflexology Walk constructed with carefully placed stones designed to stimulate the acupressure points in your feet as you walk. The 12-hectare site opened in 2022 with three bathing areas – Bathing Ridge, Lagoon Precinct and Hilltop Escarpment – and premium glamping tents that feature king-size beds and private bathing barrels.
Four more blissful day spas to visit
Lon Retreat & Spa is an award-winning, adults-only retreat on the Bellarine Peninsula.