5 inspiring Indigenous experiences in Victoria

22 Oct, 2024

Connect to country, find calm with a unique meditation experience, take an illuminating history tour or let ancient art inspire you. With the richness and diversity of its Aboriginal history and culture, one of the best things to do in Victoria is an immersive Indigenous experience. Here are five ways to feed your body, stimulate your mind and soothe your soul.

Enjoy a bush meditation

The gentle murmur of a yidaki (didgeridoo) provides the backdrop to a meditation experience in Victoria unlike any other. Living Culture’s Yidaki didgeridoo-led meditation's are healing sessions that start with a walk through landscapes of fern gullies, grass trees and eucalypt forests, where honeyeaters and parrots dart past.

Then settle in for your session and allow the rhythms of the yidaki to slow your breathing while the instrument’s powerful vibrations help heal your body.

Where: Mornington Peninsula

Tune into the seasons

To western eyes, the changing of seasons is a fairly simple thing. The buds of spring give way to the heat of summer; the blazing leaves of autumn make way for the frosts of winter. To the Gunditjmara people, however, seasons were more complex, linking the land and the sky with the people and animals that roamed them.

When the star Canolus was blazing overhead, for instance, it was the right time to collect and feast on emu eggs. Learn more about the complex interplay of elements when you take a tour through Budj Bim Cultural Landscape, which is also Australia’s newest World Heritage site.

Where: Budj Bim National Park

Nourish mind, body and soul

Set amidst mountains, waterfalls and bushland on beautiful Taungurung / Dhudhuroa Country, a retreat with Lee Couch offers the ultimate life-moving experience. Lee’s retreats combine education and health & wellness activities with her deep cultural knowledge and practices for an experience you won’t find anywhere else.

We love that she offers the opportunity to explore the spiritual practice of Dadirri – deep listening to country and self through methods that influence a deep understanding and respect for Aboriginal mindfulness.

Where: Alpine Country

Be inspired by timeless art

There is something transformative about an encounter with a memorable piece of art, a moment of inspiration that never fails to move you. Open yourself up to a connection with long-vanished artists when you visit some of the state’s most remarkable rock art sites. The rugged bushscapes of Gariwerd-the Grampians do double duty as an outdoor gallery thanks to a remarkable collection of rock art hidden away under sheltering sandstone overhangs.

From the vivid hand stencils at Manja Shelter at Hamilton to the human stick figures in the Billimina shelter in the Wartook Valley, these rock art sites offer us a direct link to the past.

Where: The Grampians

Sift through layers of history

You don’t have to know much about geology to realise that Tower Hill Wildlife Reserve is a special place. Sitting in a large volcanic crater with cone-shaped volcanic hills rising from its lakes, Tower Hill’s landscape tells a tale of primeval happenings.

It is just one of the episodes recounted on one of Worn Gundidj’s indigenous culture and nature tours, which also explore the culture of the Gunditjmara people. As you walk along there is also time to breathe deep and absorb the beauty of the varied terrain as well as enjoy some extraordinary sightings of the animals that live here, including emus, echidnas, koalas and kangaroos.

Where: Warrnambool

Image credits: Visit Victoria, Lee Couch, Well Traveller

Other stories you might like

1