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For current passes, lineup, travel, and updates, check Rabbits Eat Lettuce's official site. Rabbits Eat Lettuce official site.
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Rabbits Eat Lettuce is easiest when you treat it like a hot inland river camp with a rave inside it. The site is beautiful, but beauty does not pack your tent, sort your vehicle pass, keep your water cold, or help you find camp at 3 a.m. The best version of the weekend starts before you arrive: shade planned, bedding chosen, road timing handled, ID ready, and enough practical comfort that the fun has somewhere to land.
Start with the drive. REL takes place at Bushland Hideaway near Texas, Queensland, on the QLD/NSW border. The festival's venue information says the roads are sealed to the venue and lists approximate travel times: under four hours from Brisbane, a little over four from the Gold Coast, about five from the Sunshine Coast, roughly 4.5 from Byron Bay, and much longer from Newcastle or Sydney. That is manageable, but it is still a proper trip. Arrive rested, sober, and inside gate hours. REL is direct about police monitoring local roads, including RBT/RDT activity, so do not build a first-day plan around cutting it close or being casual behind the wheel.
The airport route is Brisbane. REL has described shuttle options from Brisbane Airport and Roma Street Station on Thursday and Friday, returning Monday. If you shuttle, pack like a person who has to carry what they bring. That means fewer decorative extras, better soft bags, a compact sleep kit, and camp gear you can realistically move without a car boot acting as your garage.
Camping is included with entry, but vehicles and comfort layers are separate decisions. General camping gets you into the world; it does not automatically create shade, sleep, or organization. Bring a proper tent, camp shelter or shade tarp, a warm sleeping bag or blankets, ground mats, a cooler or esky, a water container, wet wipes, rubbish bags, earplugs, a headlamp, and something that makes your campsite visible at night. REL itself encourages battery or solar fairy lights, flags, and drapes because camp personality is useful as well as pretty.
The weather range needs respect. Days can run hot, especially inland, and nights can get cool enough that a lazy summer-only packing list becomes miserable. Bring breathable day clothes, swimwear, hat, sunglasses, sunscreen, sturdy shoes, sandals, and a warm night layer. A onesie is not ridiculous here; it is a legitimate night-camp move if it fits your style and packs well. The river adds relief, but it also means wet gear, sunscreen discipline, and a towel strategy.
Food and hydration are stamina tools. Bring electrolytes, salty snacks, easy breakfast, protein, fruit or shelf-stable options, and whatever keeps you functional when your appetite gets weird. The market village can feed you and belongs to the pleasure, but no one has a better weekend because they forgot breakfast and lived on vibes until dinner. If you are using the showers, remember the research packet notes coin-operated hot showers have been part of the setup; bring coins or check the current payment method before you go.
REL-specific rules deserve their own pass. No glass. No fires. No campfires, candles, fireworks, flares, handheld lasers, weapons, large sound systems, generators, pets, excessive alcohol, or illegal substances. Alcohol limits are part of the official rule set, so do not pack like nobody will look. Cars and people can be searched on entry. Under-18 attendees need a legal guardian. Photo ID is not optional. Read the <a href="rabbitseatlettuce.com source page terms</a> and the <a href="rabbitseatlettuce.com.au source page information</a> before treating any of this as a rumor.
Style has a job too. REL actively invites costumes, weirdness, glow, sparkle, and playful self-expression, but the smarter look survives heat, dust, river water, walking, and a cold tent. Think breathable base, sturdy shoes, swim layer, night layer, camp jewelry, and one visual piece that makes you feel like yourself without turning the weekend into a wardrobe emergency.
The checklist version is blunt: ticket, photo ID, vehicle pass, tent, shade, warm sleeping bag, water storage, electrolytes, sunscreen, hat, swimmers, towel, sturdy shoes, camp sandals, headlamp, earplugs, rubbish bags, wet wipes, warm layer, basic first aid, power bank, and a campsite marker you can see after dark. Add $2 coins or current shower payment if needed, then check the rules again before packing alcohol or anything glass-adjacent.
The bigger advice is to pace the weekend like you want to enjoy Monday morning. The river helps. Food helps. Sleep helps. A warm layer helps. Knowing your way home through a field of decorated camps helps more than people admit.
Before you leave, check the <a href="rabbitseatlettuce.com.au source page page</a>, travel notes, gate hours, vehicle-pass details, and ticket links. Subscribe to Sparked Magazine for the festival guides, sound guides, and survival guides that help the good chaos stay genuinely good.
Use the official venue information before packing, because the map, camping layout, entry rules, water, amenities, and weather realities decide more of the weekend than the poster suggests. The survival plan starts with the ground under the tent.
REL style is strongest when it handles the body honestly: sturdy shoes, breathable layers, rain or dust backup, a secure bag, a warm night layer, a camp light, and pieces that can survive dancing without becoming trash. The outfit can be wild, but the kit still has to work.
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