The StoryIslands on the Edge of Worlds
The islands between Bali and Flores sit along one of the most fascinating natural thresholds on earth. To the west, Asia. To the east, Australasia. Between them lies a region where species, currents, climates and cultures overlap in unusual ways. The Wallace Line, named after naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, helped explain why animals on one side of Indonesia could differ so sharply from those on the other.
Komodo belongs to that sense of separation. Its dry hills and open savannah feel far from the lush image many travellers carry of Indonesia. The dragons are part of that otherness, ancient in appearance and still living in a landscape that demands respect. Long before the park became protected, local communities lived with these animals as neighbours, fishing, trading and moving carefully through the islands.
Aqua Blu enters this region by sea, which is the right way to understand it. The voyage follows the older logic of the archipelago, where islands are connected by passages, anchorages, reefs and trade routes. The yacht brings comfort, but the power of the journey comes from the country outside it, the current under the hull, the dark shape of volcanoes, the silence before a dragon appears and the feeling that Indonesia is far larger than any single island can suggest.