WONDERS OF RAJA AMPAT

One of Earth’s Great Sanctuaries

Raja Ampat is living proof of what the ocean can be. What draws us here is a chance to feel part of something bigger. To sail Raja Ampat and its hidden horizons is to enter into one of Earth’s great sanctuaries, and to see that wonder is everywhere around you.

Manta ray

Best Time to Travel to Raja Ampat

October – February

October to February, for calm seas and the best conditions for snorkeling and wildlife experiences.

Highlights of Raja Ampat

Slip into shallow waters where life schools in impossible numbers. Sit with island communities whose care for the ocean show a different philosophy for life. Enter the forest to see birds perform their dance of life. These are the highlights that stay with you long after the sails are furled.

Note: Wildlife is wonderfully wild. Which means encounters aren’t staged or guaranteed. Let nature’s gifts surprise you.

Beyond the Ordinary

SeaTrek sails four different routes through Raja Ampat. Some focus only on the archipelago, while others carry you further east into Papua or west into the Spice Islands of Maluku. Each route brings its own highlights, from whale sharks in Triton Bay to the spice markets of Ternate, all routes reveal a different side of this extraordinary seascape.

Rose compass
Ship steer wheel
Zebra shark juvenile(Anastasia Louhenapessy/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures)
Swimming with two whale sharksRod Marshall/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures
Group of Red Birds of ParadisePeter Hungerford/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures
Snorkeling with coral reef(Vincent Chalias/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures)
Love Lagoon in West Papua.(George Karbus/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures)

Our Local Heroes

Every great adventure is made possible by the hands and hearts that protect these islands. From coral gardeners and master boat builders to culture keepers and conservationists, meet the local heroes and explore our photographic journals that will bring your SeaTrek voyage to life.

Words from the Blue

Every guest brings back a story. Some tell of rare encounters with whale sharks, others of evenings spent singing with new friends on a white sandy beach. The Travel Log is our record, a living collection of what it means to sail with us, seen through the eyes of those who’ve come aboard.

Planting mangrovePeter McCarthy/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures
Family Sailing with Katharina(George Karbus/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures)
Celia and Tim at the BBQ night(Agustina Siringoringo/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures)
Group photo with teachers and students of Aduwei school after the library handover.Widya Hapsari/SeaTrek Sailing Adventures