Sorrento 16°C Sunset 5:48 pm Bay glassy, tide low Winter Insider · June 2026
Lookout Red Hill 90 min

Arthurs Seat Eagle

Arthurs Seat is the Peninsula's highest point and the Eagle is the gondola that runs people up it - twenty minutes each way, dangling over eucalypt canopy, with the bay widening out below until Melbourne appears on the northern horizon. As a first move on a Peninsula weekend it is surprisingly effective: you arrive, you go up, and the whole region orients itself around you in a way that makes the rest of the trip easier to plan.

The summit has a cafe, a lookout deck, and short walking trails through the scrub. Come at the start of a clear day for the view north across the bay; come at the end of a clear day for the light spreading over the ridge.

Go midweek if you can - weekends in school holidays can be busy. Book tickets online if visiting in summer.

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Where to eat, drink, or stay nearby

The best explore pages should lead somewhere next.

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Spa Red Hill

Alba Thermal Springs & Spa

890 Mornington-Flinders Rd, Fingal VIC 3939 · $$$

The Peninsula's second-generation thermal springs complex, cleaner architecture, smaller crowds, better pacing than the original.

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Winery Red Hill

Avani Wines

112 Shoreham Rd, Red Hill South VIC 3937 · $$

Shashi and Rohit Singh's biodynamic family estate, one of the Peninsula's only serious Syrah programs alongside the Amrit single-vineyard range.

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Cottage Red Hill

Birch Creek

Red Hill VIC 3937 · $$

Two self-contained farm cottages on 40 acres near Red Hill, open fireplaces, outdoor tubs, dog-friendly, and goats.

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Plans that already sequence this stop properly

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Plan

The Peninsula Family Day Out

A single day built around one anchor (the gondola), one lunch that works with children (the brewery), and one beach that forgives everything. No drives longer than twenty minutes, no bookings that punish a melt-down.

One-night escape · Best for family · Mornington · 60 min drive

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Balnarring 60 min · Easy

Balnarring Beach

Balnarring Beach is Western Port's quiet argument against the bay-side beaches most visitors default to. The sand is paler, the water flatter, and the crowd is almost entirely local - a few families on summer weekends, a scattering of walkers the rest of the year. The beach itself runs for kilometres, with ti-tree scrub backing the dunes and almost no built infrastructure. This is the Peninsula beach people come to when they want to swim without any of the theatre. Good for a slow afternoon between a Merricks lunch and a Balnarring produce stop. Very good for dusk walks in autumn when the light turns mauve across the water. Go through the Balnarring Beach hamlet for the easiest access point. Bring your own chair. Don't expect a kiosk.

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Red Hill 60 min

Montalto Sculpture Trail

Montalto's sculpture trail is the quieter, gentler sibling of the Pt. Leo Sculpture Park - a curated walk through the vineyard and gardens with a rotating collection of contemporary Australian work, small enough to browse in under an hour but carefully enough placed that each piece earns its spot in the landscape. The trail is designed to be walked before or after a meal at the Montalto restaurant, and that is exactly how to use it. Arrive for a late-morning cellar door tasting, walk the trail, then move into the dining room for a long lunch. The afternoon disappears and the pace is right. Ask the cellar door team what is new when you arrive; the collection changes periodically and the permanent and rotating works are labelled differently.

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Merricks 90 min

Pt. Leo Estate Sculpture Park

The Pt. Leo Sculpture Park is a sixteen-acre outdoor gallery set inside the grounds of one of the Peninsula's most ambitious winery estates, with more than sixty significant works from major Australian and international artists - including pieces by Antony Gormley, Emily Floyd, and Marcus Tatton - scattered through the lawns and gardens above the vines. The walking loop takes about an hour to an hour and a half, and the best way to approach it is with a wine in hand from the estate's own terrace. Entry is free and the work is genuinely worth the attention - this is not a winery decorated with sculpture, it is a serious outdoor gallery inside a winery. Allow a full half-day if you are also eating at Pt. Leo Restaurant or Laura. This is one of the Peninsula's most complete art-and-food destinations and deserves the time.

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Further reading

Journal pieces that deepen this stop

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Editor's Letter 8 min

A Winter Peninsula Weekend: The Case for Coming in July

13 April 2026

Short days, cheap rooms, empty dining rooms, a fire in every cellar door with a hearth, and a coast that looks like a different country in a southerly. Winter is the Peninsula's most underrated season and the one that gives the region back to the people who actually live here.

Hub Guide 8 min

Red Hill: The Peninsula Insider Guide

2 May 2026

Red Hill is the Peninsula's food-and-wine centre of gravity, but the best version of it is narrower than most visitors think. This is a place for one market morning, one properly chosen cellar door, and one lunch that gets the whole day.

Curated by our editors.

Peninsula This Weekend

One useful Peninsula email. Where to book, what changed, what's worth the drive — sent when there's actually something worth knowing.

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Peninsula This Weekend 31 May

King's Birthday is the loudest winter weekend on the Peninsula. Two clear moves, and the rest of the weekend kept open.

  • The Cellar Door Short List
  • How to Build a Red Hill Saturday
  • Things to Do on the Mornington Peninsula
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