NIGHT-LIGHT FEVER
Stargazing is the original traveller obsession – how else do you think the ancient explorers on their world cruises passed the time? And it seems nothing has changed. In 2024, record aurora activity saw the Northern and Southern Lights dancing across our skies and into social media feeds. The aurora forecast for 2025 is just as good and the bright sparks of the travel industry are gearing up to deliver tours and experiences for light lovers.
Dark-sky tourism is rising astronomically, and Australia is home to some of the world’s best reserves, such as Arkaroola International Dark-Sky Sanctuary in South Australia. Here, you’ll find telescopes, a state-of-the-art Astro Experience and reclining lounge chairs so you can lie back and soak it all in.
If time and distance allow, tours and hotels in Scandinavia, Alaska and Canada offer myriad ways to see the stars and auroras, including luxury Arctic resorts, adventurous expedition cruises, and snowmobile and dog-sledding itineraries. A professional photographer is on board for Trafalgar’s new seven-day Alaska Northern Lights itinerary to ensure you capture the celestial kaleidoscope over Denali National Park.
Complementing this is the trend for man-made, light-based installations and drone and laser shows. Bruce Munro, the artist behind the famous Field of Light at Uluru, is back in 2025 with Trail of Light on the Murray River at Mildura/Wentworth; Uluru has the new Sunrise Journeys light show, and Illumina is now on K’gari, Queensland. Across the world, a new exhibition of Munro’s work is lighting up Velarde Gallery in Devon, England, and immersive light and VR experiences – think Tokyo’s TeamLab Planets – have spread to Singapore with the new Bubble Planet.