The Indonesian archipelago is the most biologically diverse marine environment on Earth — the Coral Triangle, whose 6 million square kilometres encompass Indonesia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, and Malaysia, contains 76% of the world's known coral species, 37% of the world's coral reef fish species, and the highest marine biodiversity concentration recorded anywhere in the ocean. Within this triangle, two destinations stand at the apex: Komodo National Park in the Lesser Sunda Islands, where the world's largest lizard (the Komodo dragon, Varanus komodoensis) shares its island range with the most intact coral reefs in the Nusa Tenggara chain; and Raja Ampat in West Papua, whose 1,500 islands, 540 coral species, and 1,508 recorded fish species constitute the single most biodiverse marine environment on Earth by every measurable parameter.
The Southeast Asia Yacht Expedition is structured around the expedition yacht as the only vehicle that makes either destination fully accessible — the ability to anchor in the bay whose reef is most intact, to reach the dive site before the day-boat operators arrive from Labuan Bajo or Sorong, and to move between islands at the pace that the wind, the current, and the expedition programme permit. The Komodo dragon observation on Rinca or Komodo Island; the manta ray cleaning station at Manta Point below the Gili Motang sea wall; and the Raja Ampat underwater landscape at Wayag, Pianemo, and the Cape Kri dive site — where the world record for fish species counted in a single dive was set in 2007 — all require the expedition yacht's flexibility and the early morning timing that the land-based operator circuit cannot provide.
This 8-to-10-day itinerary integrates the expedition yacht with three of Southeast Asia's most considered luxury addresses — Capella Ubud in the Keliki Valley above Ubud (the Bali cultural heartland for the pre-expedition arrival); Bawah Reserve in the Anambas Islands north of Singapore (the private island conservation resort whose seaplane access makes it the most remote single luxury address in Indonesia); and Amanpulo on Palawan in the Philippines (Aman's private island resort whose position at the northern tip of the Sulu Sea makes it the most considered single day-trip extension from the Raja Ampat circuit). Three addresses whose combination with the expedition programme produces the most complete single Southeast Asian luxury experience available.
The Komodo dragon on Rinca at dawn, the manta ray at Manta Point, and Raja Ampat's Wayag karst islands where the world's most biodiverse reef begins at the surface.
The Southeast Asian expedition season peaks April to October (dry season in Indonesia); the best visibility and calmest seas at Komodo are April to June and September to October. The yacht departs from Labuan Bajo (Komodo route) or Sorong (Raja Ampat route). Flights to Labuan Bajo operate from Bali (45 minutes); flights to Sorong operate from Jakarta (3 hours) or Bali (3 hours via Makassar). Routing is weather-adjusted daily by the expedition captain.
Every Richseen Southeast Asia expedition is individually arranged. The itinerary routes Komodo and Raja Ampat as separate expeditions or combined for guests with 14+ days; the 8-to-10-day framework below covers one primary destination. Hotel availability at Capella Ubud and Bawah Reserve requires advance booking; Bawah seaplane access is confirmed alongside the reservation.
Every detail — from your first morning above the Keliki Valley to your final dive above the world's most biodiverse reef — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From USD 22,000+ per person
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