What Is Rabbits Eat Lettuce?

Festival scene connected to Rabbits Eat Lettuce.
Credit: Rabbits Eat Lettuce.

Rabbits Eat Lettuce is the Australian bush-doof lane with enough structure to feel like a real temporary village. The 2026 edition takes place over Easter weekend, April 2-6, at Bushland Hideaway on the Dumaresq River near Texas, Queensland. That setting gives the festival its shape before a single DJ plays: river swims, wide grassy camping, long drives, hot days, colder nights, decorated camps, and a crowd that arrives ready to build a world together.

WHO
dancers, doof veterans, backpackers, yoga people, psytrance heads, bass kids, house wanderers, costume extroverts, market browsers, and anyone who likes a festival where the campsite is part of the culture. WHAT: a camping festival with dance music, live music, art, workshops, yoga and movement, a market village, immersive installations, and enough side quests to keep the weekend from becoming only a stage schedule. WHERE: Bushland Hideaway, 3695 Texas Yelarbon Road, Beebo, Queensland, close to the Queensland/New South Wales border and a short drive from Texas. WHEN: Easter long weekend, with early entry beginning Thursday and general entry Friday. WHY: REL sits in a rare festival lane: independent, camping-heavy, visually playful, body-aware, community-led, and built around more than headliners.

The official event frame is already useful: REL calls itself music, art, workshops, and camping by the river, and that is the correct way to read it. The river is not a backdrop. It changes how the day moves. A hot inland festival with freshwater nearby gives people somewhere to reset, cool down, flirt, wash off the dust, and return to the dancefloor with a little more life in the body. That gives REL a softer center than a harsher paddock rave, even when the music gets heavy.

The non-music highlights make REL feel bigger than its stages. REL's Bohemian Village and workshop world point toward the transformational side of the festival: movement, talks, healing-adjacent sessions, arts, crafts, and learning spaces that give daytime a reason to exist. The yoga and movement program keeps the body from becoming only a party machine, which is one of the dividing lines between a proper camping festival and a long concert with tents.

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The market village also fits Sparked's eye. REL makes room for healthy food, drinks, clothing, jewellery, craft, and healing stalls, which means the visual story is not only what people packed from home. It is what they discover, borrow, buy, alter, trade, and wear into the night. That is where festival fashion becomes more interesting than costume alone. A bunny reference can be fun; a whole campsite dressed with lights, flags, handmade pieces, river gear, and night layers is better.

The art lane is similarly practical. REL's immersive art language, side stages, skate zone, visual spaces, and camp-decor culture make the festival feel like a place with corners. REL rewards wandering because that is where the culture appears: the conversation beside a food stall, the person who built a ridiculous camp marker, the little dancefloor that becomes your favorite, the workshop you did not plan to attend.

Size helps here. REL drew close to 5,000 people in 2026, which is small enough for identity to travel through the crowd. At a festival this size, campsite personality, repeated faces, and small-stage discoveries can carry real weight. You are not just entering a massive machine. You are entering a compact world where the social layer can become part of the memory.

There is also a real regional story underneath the fun. A festival that lands near a small Queensland border town does not arrive in a vacuum. People drive through local roads, stop for supplies, meet police checkpoints, use nearby services, and bring money and disruption into a place that exists long after the camps come down. REL works best when the host setting is part of the weekend rather than scenery. Sparked can admire the magic while still reminding readers to be polite in town, support local businesses when possible, drive sober, and leave the river site cleaner than they found it.

The first-timer read is this: REL is not a passive event. It rewards people who want to participate. If you decorate camp, choose one workshop, follow one unknown artist, swim during the day, dress with intent, and learn the site instead of only chasing the biggest names, the weekend opens up. That is the difference between attending and actually entering the place.

The practical CTA is simple: start with the Rabbits Eat Lettuce website, then read the event information, venue and travel notes, and experience pages before buying or packing. If REL sounds like your lane, use the festival's ticket links while they are active and subscribe to Sparked Magazine for the Sound Guide, Survival Guide, and deeper festival features.

The official Rabbits Eat Lettuce site frames the festival as a full camping world, and that framing matters. REL is not only selling a lineup; it is selling several days of outdoor living, costume energy, market culture, late-night sound, recovery, and social permission. The reader needs to understand the camp before judging the poster.

That is why the most useful starting point is simple: decide whether you want a festival that feels handmade, muddy, expressive, and communal rather than polished for distance. REL makes more sense when the reader accepts the camp as part of the show.

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