The drive from Melbourne to Marysville takes less than two hours, but somewhere along the Black Spur, time begins to stretch.
The phone loses signal. The light shifts through the trees. The road bends enough to make you slow down.

That act of slowing down might be the real reason glamping has taken hold across Victoria. It is not just about luxury tents or scenic backdrops. It is about permission. To pause. To rest. To feel unhurried for a day or two.

Why Australians Are Seeking the Pause Button

Across Australia, the way people travel is changing. Tourism Research Australia’s most recent domestic visitor data shows that more than half of regional trips are now motivated by relaxation or nature. Visit Victoria’s research team has noted a similar shift, with short, restorative breaks within two hours of Melbourne among the strongest-growing travel segments.

These aren’t structured wellness retreats. They are simple, nature-led escapes: glamping tents, cabins and cottages where the focus is space, quiet and connection.

The Appeal of Simple Comfort

Traditional camping offers disconnection, but often at the cost of comfort. Hotels offer comfort, but not disconnection. Glamping sits quietly between them.

A tent with a real bed, linen, heating and power gives you ease without cutting you off from your surroundings. You hear the river at night, feel the air shift and wake with natural light, without the backache or damp socks that come with roughing it.

At Marysville Holiday Park, this balance is deliberate. The glamping tents sit beneath mountain ash beside the Steavenson River. Guests step outside to birdsong and forest air, then wander to a café or the walking trail to Steavenson Falls. It is a small luxury that never interrupts what you came for: stillness.

A Return to Real Rest

Parks Victoria’s Healthy Parks Healthy People initiative summarises decades of global research showing that time in nature reduces stress and improves wellbeing. In short, the outdoors works.

Glamping bridges two ideas that once seemed opposite: adventure and relaxation. It gives travellers the sensory benefits of the bush while keeping the physical comfort that lets them switch off.

That balance also matches how Australians travel now. Trips are shorter, closer to home and focused on quality over quantity. A Friday night drive to Marysville is realistic. A full week away can wait.

The Emotional Reset

Talk to glamping guests and one word appears often: reset.

The first hour can feel restless, the second heavy-limbed, and by the next morning, your body has settled to the rhythm of the forest. There is no itinerary to chase. You walk, read, nap or watch mist drift across the ranges. In that quiet, you remember what rest is supposed to feel like.

Nature as Antidote

Time in nature does more than restore. Visit Victoria’s sustainability and wellbeing frameworks note that travellers who connect deeply with the outdoors tend to value it more.
The simple act of staying somewhere surrounded by trees encourages care for the place itself.

Why Glamping Works

Glamping works because it feels both rare and familiar. It takes you outdoors, but not out of your depth. It removes pressure without removing comfort.

For couples, it brings back simplicity. For solo travellers, it offers solitude without loneliness. For anyone tired of constant digital noise, it offers a way to be quiet by choice, not by accident.

And perhaps that is why Marysville’s form of glamping, forested and riverside yet a short drive from Melbourne, has found its moment. It asks for nothing except time and gives you back exactly that.

Want to read more?

  • Tourism Research Australia, Domestic Visitor Data 2024 – Nature-Based and Short Break Travel
  • Visit Victoria, Wellbeing and Nature-Based Tourism Insights, 2024
  • Parks Victoria, Healthy Parks Healthy People Framework, 2023