Next Trips Available |
||
|
click to open the 2009 Indonesia Dive Trips Schedule Underwater Photo Trips - Underwater Video Trips NOTE: Discount dive travel websites are not authorized to sell or list these trips.
|
||
Next Trips, Nov 12-23 & Nov 26-Dec 7 Rd Trip Air USA-Indonesia, $676 inc. taxes 4 spaces available each trip email us for info |
|||||
| 2009 Raja Ampat Liveaboard Trips: | All dive trips are limited participation Each dive trip
is dedicated to creating a superior |
||||
| Jan 8 - Jan 20 | Sorong-Sorong, 12 nts, private, FULL | ||||
| Apr 22 - May 4 | Sorong-Sorong, 12 nts, $4095pp FULL | ||||
| May 8 - May 20 | Sorong-Halmahera-Lembeh, 12 nts FULL » details about this trip |
||||
| Oct 29 - Nov 9 | Kaimana-Triton Bay-Sorong, 11 nts, FULL | ||||
| Nov 12 - Nov 23 | Sorong-Sorong, 11 nts, $3755pp 4 spaces | ||||
| Nov 26 - Dec 7 | Sorong-Sorong, 11 nts, $3755pp 4 spaces | ||||
| 2010 Raja Ampat Liveaboard Trips: | |||||
| Nov 11- Nov 22 | Sorong-Sorong, 11 nts, $3755pp | ||||
|
|||||
2008 Raja Ampat |
see also Lembeh Strait Photo Trips Sorong-Sorong 12nt trips, Sorong-Sorong 12nt trips, $3895pp |
||||
| 2008 Raja Ampat Liveaboard Adventure Trips: |
Sorong - Halmahera - Lembeh: May 16-28, 12 nts FULL |
||||
| WHAT: | Liveaboard Dive Trips focused on underwater photography, underwater video & maximum diving | ||||
| WHERE: | Raja Ampat Islands, Irian Jaya (West Papua) Indonesia; the far west end of New Guinea Island | ||||
| HOW: | Indonesian liveaboard "SMY Ondina" with extra dives, services, menu, and special itinerary | ||||
| WHY: | Special trips dedicated to producing top quality underwater photos and underwater video, escorted by experienced Raja Ampat guides, limited participation. | ||||
| COST: | As above, boat only. Inquire for guaranteed single cabin, and air flights. more info | ||||
| MORE DETAILS: | see 2009 Raja Ampat Dive Trip Information | ||||
| email us about Raja Ampat Liveaboard trips |
|||||
| 2009 Raja Ampat Dive Trip Information (current years' dive trips) | |||||
The TRIP: Healthy reefs, unusual reef structures and dive sites. Unusual dive sites and the most diverse marine life area ever recorded. Huge schools of fish: barracuda, surgeonfish, fusiliers, batfish, sweetlips... macro creatures: blue-ring octopus, pygmy seahorses, double ended pipefish, shrimp gobies, nudibranchs, and loads of reef fish. Beautiful unspoiled topside scenery. This is a trip you will never forget. About US and the TRIP: We've spent over 43 weeks creating images on 4+ dives per day in Raja Ampat over the past 10 years and know the reefs and conditions necessary for optimal image and video making. This will be the 13th - 17th trips we've made with a group (we're addicted!) here. Irian Jaya (Papua) is where we want to go for our diving holiday, so join us and find out why. Since 1999, Deb has written several dive magazine articles, created several websites for the area (more to come), has contributed photos to dive magazines in Asia, the USA and UK, presented shows at DEMA, Seaspace, UPS & dive club meetings and wrote the Raja Ampat section of the Periplus Guide to Diving in Asia.
|
|||||
While our guides in Raja Ampat have been excellent at finding the reefs, they have not been aware of the conditions photographers' need in order to create outstanding images. We've worked it out.. although with much arguing and stamping of feet ! We've dived many of Raja Ampat's best sites dozens of times and we've explored by small boat many areas that our liveaboard trip will visit. In our exploration and time in Raja Ampat we've also dived sites that were a waste of time (2008 note.. unfortunately now some of the famous ones!). We'll be giving those a miss on these trips. This will NOT be an exploration trip. Although we will try a few new sites, we don't believe photographers and videographers should spend this much money and their time searching for places where they might get a decent photo.
We strive to include only compatible divers & photographers on our trips so that everyone has a great time as well as brings home great photos. Over the past 16 years of arranging dive trips for groups to Indonesia, the Caribbean and the Philippines, we've learned a great deal about what most photographers want from a dive trip... i.e. great diving, freedom to get that perfect shot, good tasty food, comfortable accommodations, stable electrical supplies ! and a congenial group to share the big finds and photo conversations. We do screen our guests, and require they behave themselves while on our trip... so if you are grumpy, want to hog photo subjects found by the guides and your desire is to be unhappy and let others know, .. please find another trip. We receive heaps of praise for our organized trips. References readily available from previous trip members!
Don't delay. If you want to see Raja Ampat in all its glory.. get there ASAP. Water Temp : The water temperature is 1mm neoprene or polartec diving, usual temperature is 84-86F with an occasional "chilly" 82F spot. We've had no problem with cold when diving 4 -7 long dives per day. Liveaboard Travel: These islands are very close together. We plan not to make long journeys, but to keep the boat in an area for several days and dive the sites surrounding that area as conditions (current, angle of the sun, time of day) provide the best photo ops on a site. We aren't into crossing oceans, we're here to see the marine life and get those images. Conditions: We choose the best season for diving the area. In fact, the liveaboard organized the rest of their schedule around our trips. The seas are typically flat.. like glass in some areas. Through the surface, split images and surface reflection shots are often possible. Wide Angle Photography: There are VERY unique formations and unusually large schools of fish that make this an excellent area for wide angle photography. Again the trick is getting into the right spot at the right time. Sometimes this means you must be able to descend quickly to get down and out of the current. The same reef can be amazing or boring depending on the current & light. Sometimes the sites are shallow and you need to look near the surface for the best photo ops. We'll tell you what is special about each dive site during the pre-dive briefing. Macro Photography: Can be done on nearly every site.. if you just ignore all the fish... We have several sites that we particularly like for macro. The silty bays, although not "clean" have abundant and unusual macro life. No pollution though.. only clean dirt out here. We always see pygs (pygmy seahorses), nudibranchs.. there are unusual small fish, a newly discovered species of epaulette shark, the "Walking Shark".. the ever present anemone fish, sometimes blue-ring octopus or flamboyant cuttlefish.... we've seen a lot of the allied cowries on the soft corals.. really just too much to name.. please ask about macro. Current: While there is a lot of current on certain sites, we do NOT want or plan to drift and try to take photos (with one exception). We do NOT want guests to be struggling with camera gear in strong currents. If you don't know how to dive in current, let us teach you.. that is the #1 specialty that doesn't get taught. We've noticed that many divers are afraid of current simply because they do not know how to deal with it. (note.. we can drop divers who don't like the current behind the reefs in protected areas.. they won't see the best diving, but whatever makes them happy.. we'll do it). |
|||||
![]() ![]() ![]() |
|||||
| Raja Ampat Dive Magazine Articles | |||||
|
|||||
| Diving Images & Underwater Photo Galleries | |||||
| new2005 Raja Ampat Trip Galleries | |||||
| Raja Ampat Underwater Pictures, Irian Jaya Gallery 1 | |||||
| Raja Ampat Diving West Papau Gallery 2 | |||||
| Deb's Raja Ampat Photography Portfolio | |||||
| Raja Ampat Liveaboard Pictures | |||||
![]() 2005 Raja Ampat Underwater Photography Gallery |
|||||
| About Our 2004-2005 Raja Ampat Dive Trips | ||||||||||
|
The best things I can say about our previous trips, is that some of those divers signed up for 2005 and 2006! We have 40% repeat guests in 2006 but always welcome new guests... and hope they are happy enough to join us again too. Our two 2004 and two 2005 trips were a success. Our method of diving for photos appealed to the participants as did the special menu, extra dives, extra services and the improvements to the ship we requested for our trips. For the second year, underwater photographers on our trips won the top prizes in the photo contest. Not too shabby! We don't want to give away all our secrets, so after reading our web pages, send us an email or give us a call (817.626.0636) so we can tell you all the details. In summary, everyone loved the ship. Many said it was the best organized liveaboard for diving they'd seen. Our special menu was a hit.. again, many said it was the best liveaboard food they'd ever had.. even comparing it favorably to luxury land-based resort restaurants. And the cabins... , all the divers really liked the cabins. They were spacious, clean and comfortable.. coming out on top of other Indonesian liveaboards for the functionality. Kudos to Ricard for his design of the ship's interior (that's everything inside the hull).
| ||||||||||
| 2005 Raja Ampat Trips | ||||||||||
|
We had two excellent trips. Lots of fishy dives. If I had to choose one outstanding thing about this trip for me it would be barracuda! On many of the dives I ended up swimming in the blue with a large school of them. There were mixed schools, segregated schools and individuals getting cleaned. Expect some good barraduda shots in the 2005 gallery. During the 1st trip, a couple of spots in the Dampier Strait were favorites for fish. Most of the group got to be surrounded by fish several times.
On another dive, again surrounded by silversides, Ricard and I were buzzed by a school of Mobula Rays that circled past us many times. We caught the current just right at one of our favorite sites so were treated to schools of hundreds of cooperative sweetlips and at the top, massive schools of fusiliers and surgeonfish. On the second trip we had some outstanding fishy dives too. We didn't manage to catch the masses of sweetlips and silversides seen on the first trip, but some of the dives were thick with jacks, barracuda, surgeonfish, fusiliers, chubs and snapper schools. This was the batfish trip. At one site there was a photographer feeding frenzy on a large school of large batfish that were trying to relax in the "sweet spot" at the edge of a small island. I waited for the frenzy to end (maybe they ran out of air?) and bubbles to dissipate, then spent a few minutes alone with the batfish near the end of my dive. At another site the current was too strong so we were swept past our intended dive area and around the backside where a docile school of batfish provided ample (and excellent) photo ops for the entire group. We were seeing Wobbegongs on many dives but somehow Hal always missed them. On the next to last day there was a Wobbegong at 12 ft in a good location for photos. I refused to leave the water, keeping an eye on it until the dive tender went back to the ship and brought Hal. Well, Hal had photographed one earlier on that same dive. A different one. But he came anyway and got some good shots of this one as well. The only downside on this trip.. a shortage of critters compared to all the other trips I've done in Raja Ampat. We had some, but poor Paulino never saw his blue-ring octopus (although Bruce spent time with one on the next trip) and we never encountered even one ghost pipefish. However by the end of each trip, all divers were suffering from "pygmy seahorse fatigue". I found one fan of them at 15 ft. and another area at the same site had red, yellow and orange pygs, plus plucked chicken pygs with a 1 min swim. The land-based trips we'd done previously had us missing some exceptional night dives and limited us to only 3-4 dives per day. We treat the liveaboard as if it was an island.. not needing to move every dive... and with SMY Ondina's help we've worked out a scheme that photographers really like. We're bypassing some of the problems inherent in liveaboard diving and incorporating some of the best parts of land-based into our trips.
|
||||||||||
| Guest Divers Comments and Reports | ||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
click to open the Comments from Dive Trip Guests
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
| About the Liveaboard: |
|
SMY Ondina is a 7 year old Indonesian traditional Pinisi ship specifically designed and outfitted exclusively for diving. Nitrox is available. (BTW the sail color is traditional.. not dirty.) It has run many trips in Raja Ampat. We have separate webpages with medium size photos, boat specs and amenities.. be sure to look at the photo gallery and read the captions. SMY Ondina - Raja Ampat Liveaboard Details & Pictures
|
| Dive Trip Inclusion, Availabiltily & Cost: |
|
See Schedule and Availability top of page. Liveaboard Dive Trip Includes:
Not included:
Please note that due to the doubling of fuel prices in Indonesia Oct. 2005, a fuel surcharge of $150 per person currently applies to this trip. All liveaboards and dive operations in Indonesia have increased trip prices or are adding a surcharge to cover the increase. Read the fine print, conditions and change pages to find these costs which are covered as fuel surcharges, port fees, etc. more about the liveaboard ship
TERMS & CONDITIONS FOR THE DIVE TRIPS: Please read our terms & conditions page prior to sending a deposit. Raja Ampat Cityseahorse Deb Fugitt Ondina call us in Texas at 817-626-0636 for information or email us about Raja Ampat Liveaboard trips If you are interested in this trip we REALLY must speak with you about it There is no way to emphasize how special this area is or whether this trip will be suitable for you without some detailed communication. So, please call or schedule for us to call you. Deb Fugitt |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
| How to Get to Raja Ampat: |
|
There are International flights to Jakarta, Bali, Manado and Makassar in Indonesia connecting through Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore and other countries. From the USA, the most efficient and least expensive route is to Manado on Singapore Airlines, however we are not recommending that route due to the small aircraft currently being used on that route with bags often left behind. From the USA you fly via LAX, SFO, JFK or IAH to Singapore, then make a connection on Silk Air to Manado where you will overnight. Those who have a tight schedule can go via Jakarta. Instead we now recommend flying to Sorong via Jakarta. This route is a bit more expensive but in our experience baggage has not been delayed. Some routes use large aircraft and some small aircraft. We can recommend the best, most reliable route for your trip. You will be met at the airport in Sorong and escorted directly onto SMY Ondina. In Manado, Bali or Jakarta you will be met at the airport, transferred to your hotel and back. Note hotel and air travel is not included in the trip price. We are not travel agents but will help you organize your travel which you will purchase directly from an airline wholesaler or through us via an agent in Indonesia. We do not charge for this assistance. You can also use frequent flyer miles to Jakarta, Singapore or Bali). We have an arrangement for air tickets with Singpore Airlines from the USA to Indonesia with great prices and terms. Approximate airfare from LAX or JFK to Jakarta is $1200 + tax.
|
| 2009 Halmahera Liveaboard Itinerary, Sorong to Lembeh | |
May 8 - May 20, 2009: 12 nts, Sorong - Halmahera - Lembeh - $4,095pp This trip starts in Sorong, Papua (Raja Ampat) and ends in Lembeh Strait (North Sulawesi) passing through and diving Halmahera. Like all our Raja Ampat trips, this trip will offer extra diving and special services and will we will accompany the trip to ensure things go smoothly. This the second time we have offered this particular itinerary. The trip will offer some of the finest diving in Indonesia... a gourmet sampler of photographic delights! This is a great trip for photographers and for people who love to observe marine life and want a sample of the best diving Indonesia has to offer. If you are interested please email us about the Raja Ampat- Halmahera - Lembeh Strait liveaboard trip As an add-on to this liveaboard trip, book into one of the fantastic resorts on Lembeh Strait.. The ship will drop you off at the resort so no drying, packing or surface interval for flying required! Visit www.cityseahorse.com/raja-ampat-halmahera-lembeh-strait-liveaboard-diving.php for more info. |
|
| Write City Seahorse for Information. | ||
| email City Seahorse Tel: (817) 626-0636 Fax: everything by email |
City Seahorse, Inc. 6387B Camp Bowie Blvd., #308 Fort Worth, Texas 76116 |
|
| © 1997-2008, Deborah Fugitt, City Seahorse, Inc. All rights reserved. No one, for any reason, is permitted to copy the photos, graphics, video or text on these pages without written permission from City Seahorse, Inc. In the event that an infringement is discovered you will be notified and invoiced the industry standard TRIPLE FEE for unauthorised usage and/or prosecuted for Copyright Infringement in U.S. Federal Court where you will be subject to pay our court costs and attorneys' fees as well as a fine of US$150,000 statutory damages. Write the webmaster for permission or information. | ||