Every cruise is woven with moments that change how you see the world — from sleeping beneath the Milky Way to swimming through a lake of golden jellyfish, standing beside ancient predators, and sharing a meal with sea-nomad families above the turquoise sea.
Every cruise includes access to these experiences. Here is exactly what each one looks like — and why guests carry them home long after the voyage ends.

Slip beneath the surface and enter a world that will rewrite your sense of wonder.
There is a quiet that exists only underwater. The moment your face breaks the surface of Togean's impossibly blue water, the world above stops mattering. Below you, centuries-old coral cathedrals pulse with colour — clownfish weave through swaying anemones, sea turtles glide past with ancient composure, and napoleon wrasse the size of your arm hover in the blue like ghosts. These are reef patches that mass tourism has never reached. They exist as they have for millennia. And for a few unhurried hours, you exist within them.
Why guests love this

Stand in the presence of a creature that has outlived every civilisation on Earth.
Some moments check a box. This one rewires something inside you. On Rinca Island's volcanic savannah — where dry golden grasslands meet a sky that seems to stretch beyond the curvature of the earth — you walk within metres of the last great reptilian predator. Komodo dragons have existed for millions of years, long before humans drew their first breath. Up to three metres long, unhurried, and utterly indifferent to your presence, they carry the weight of deep time in every slow, deliberate step. You are not watching a performance. You are standing, heart pounding, inside the oldest living story on the planet.
Why guests love this

The rainforest rewards those who go looking — and what waits at the end of this trail is worth every step.
The primary rainforest of the Togean Islands is one of the most biodiverse on Earth — and almost no one walks through it. Your guide leads you deeper into Malenge's interior on trails known only to locals, through a cathedral of ancient trees alive with the calls of hornbills and the rustle of cuscus moving through the canopy overhead. Time loses its meaning. The air is cool and thick with the scent of damp earth. And then you hear it — distant at first, then unmistakable — the crash of falling water. The forest opens. A hidden cascade tumbles fifteen metres into a natural plunge pool, sunlight breaking through the canopy in shafts of gold. You have found it. The swim is yours alone.
Why guests love this

Step into a civilisation that has existed above the sea for five hundred years — and never needed land.
The Bajo people are extraordinary. For centuries, their entire civilisation has existed above the sea — a labyrinth of wooden boardwalks connecting brightly painted stilt houses, with fishing boats moored where other cultures park bicycles. The moment you step off the boat and onto those boardwalks, the modern world falls away. Children splash in the water below. Grandmothers weave at doorways with hands that have never stopped moving. You are welcomed in — not as a tourist, but as a guest. You cook together, eat together, and listen to stories that have been told the same way for generations, with the ocean rocking gently beneath you. Nothing here is performed. Everything is real.
Why guests love this

The hour when time stops, the sky catches fire, and the water holds every colour.
The afternoon heat softens. You slip a kayak into mirror-still water at the mouth of Kadidiri's mangrove river, and immediately the world contracts to something small and perfect — the dip of your paddle, the cry of a kingfisher hidden somewhere in the prop roots, the green-gold light filtering through ancient mangrove tunnels arching overhead. Then the bay opens. The sky turns amber, then crimson, then a violet so deep it looks painted. Every colour is reflected perfectly in the water beneath you, so that for a moment you can't tell which world is the real one. This is the golden hour that holiday brochures promise and almost never deliver. Here, it happens every single evening.
Why guests love this

Wave your hand and watch the ocean ignite. This is the night you will never stop telling people about.
Una-Una's geothermal waters create conditions for bioluminescence that outshines anything else in the Indonesian archipelago. You descend into total darkness — and then you move your hand. Blue sparks explode. Every gesture, every kick, every breath ignites trails of cold blue fire in the water around you. Spanish dancer nudibranchs pulse in neon. Mandarin fish glow against the reef. Octopus materialise from nowhere, then vanish. And when you look up, the stars above the surface mirror the living light below, and for a moment the boundary between sky and sea disappears entirely. This is one of those nights that, once you have lived it, becomes the benchmark for everything that follows.
Why guests love this
What our guests say
“Standing metres away from a wild Komodo dragon, guided by a ranger who has done this for twenty years — that is the moment I think about every time someone asks me about the trip.”
“I have done bioluminescence dives in the Philippines, the Maldives, and Mexico. Una-Una is categorically different. The intensity of the light in those geothermal waters is something I will never forget.”
“The Bajo village was the highlight of the whole trip — not just the cruise, but my entire year. They welcomed us into their home. You do not find moments like that on a regular holiday.”