Dragon Trekking
- Roughly one licensed park ranger per group of up to five visitors — a park-mandated ratio, not a company policy. Independent trekking is never permitted.

Quick Answer: Every voyage is run by a BNSP-certified yacht captain trained to STCW Basic Safety standards, with dives led by PADI Divemaster/SSI Dive Guide-certified crew, and dragon treks always escorted by a licensed park ranger at roughly one guide per five visitors.
Most first-time researchers spend their time looking at cabin photos and deck layouts. But the variable that actually determines whether a trip is safe and well-paced is invisible in photos: who is driving the boat, who is leading the dive, and who is walking beside you when a dragon crosses the trail.
Komodo National Park isn’t a forgiving place to get wrong — currents at sites like Castle Rock and Manta Alley can shift from a gentle drift to a genuine down-current within minutes. Crew credentials here aren’t a marketing checkbox; they’re the actual safety system your trip runs on.

| Credential | Held By | What It Actually Covers |
|---|---|---|
| BNSP Yacht Captain Certification | Captain (Markus Jehamat) | Indonesia’s national vocational standard for commercial vessel command — navigation, handling, and legal authority to operate a passenger yacht. |
| STCW Basic Safety Training | Captain | International maritime standard covering firefighting, survival at sea, first aid, and emergency response aboard a vessel. |
| PADI Divemaster | Dive Operations Lead (Maria Ngganggus) | Professional-level dive leadership — supervising divers and managing dive-site risk assessment. |
| SSI Dive Guide | Dive Operations Lead | Site-specific guiding qualification focused on local dive-site knowledge and briefing standards. |
| EFR Instructor | Dive Operations Lead | Authorized to teach and assess CPR, first aid, and emergency oxygen response within the crew itself. |
| Certified Hospitality Management (Local BNSP) | Guest Experience Lead (Benito Fernandez) | Indonesian vocational standard for hospitality service and guest-experience operations. |
| Food Safety & Hygiene Training | Guest Experience Lead | Onboard food handling, storage, and hygiene protocol for multi-day catering at sea. |
| Licensed Park Ranger (BTNK) | Assigned per trek | Mandatory official escort for any trekking on Komodo or Rinca Island, required by park regulation. |
Life jackets, first-aid kit, radio, and signaling equipment checked before guests board, not spot-checked after the fact.
The captain or a designated officer walks every guest through emergency exits, life-jacket locations, and muster points before departure.
A site-specific briefing runs before each dive or trek — expected current, depth range, and what to do if separated from the group.
Guides maintain the ratios above throughout the activity, not just at entry and exit.
Every dive, snorkel, and trek closes with a confirmed headcount before the group moves on.
The crew reviews the day, flags any condition changes, and adjusts the next day’s plan rather than running a fixed script.

We operate as part of the Komodo Luxury network — 5,000+ Google reviews and a TripAdvisor Travelers’ Choice award for three consecutive years (2023–2025). Certifications are maintained on a recurring basis and ranger coordination runs through established park relationships, not ad hoc booking.
None of this replaces good judgment on the water — but it means the person calling whether conditions are safe has both the certification and the years of local experience to make that call correctly.
| Trip Type | Ranger/Guide Involvement | Typical Supervision Level |
|---|---|---|
| 3D2N open trip | Full crew: captain, dive/snorkel guide, licensed ranger for treks | Standard ratios; ideal for first-timers wanting a fully guided introduction |
| Private diving charter | Dedicated dive guide matched to group’s certification level | Often tighter ratios, itinerary built around the group’s experience |
| Family or non-diver itinerary | Captain, snorkel/trek-focused guide, ranger for land visits | Closer supervision for children and first-time snorkelers |
| Extended 7–11 night expedition | Full crew across a longer rotation, including South Komodo sites | Same certification standard maintained across the full voyage |
Browse the full dive sites list and destinations guide to see where this crew operates, and check current rates on the price guide.
BNSP certification — Indonesia’s national vocational credential for commanding a passenger vessel — plus STCW Basic Safety Training, the international standard for firefighting, survival, and emergency response at sea. Captain Markus Jehamat holds both, alongside 15+ years navigating Komodo’s waters specifically.
Every trek, on either Komodo or Rinca Island — independent trekking is never permitted, regardless of which operator you book with. Rangers typically work at roughly one guide per group of up to five visitors.
Both are professional-level dive leadership credentials from different certifying agencies, and both authorize supervising divers and assisting with instruction. Holding both, as Maria Ngganggus does, combines PADI’s global standard with SSI’s site-guiding focus.
Group size stays small enough for direct visual contact with every diver, shrinking further at current-exposed sites like Castle Rock or Manta Alley compared to calmer sites. Exact numbers flex with conditions and diver experience rather than one fixed ratio.
Yes. Dive Operations Lead Maria Ngganggus holds an EFR Instructor certification, qualifying her to train and assess CPR, first aid, and emergency oxygen response within the crew. Combined with the captain’s STCW training, coverage extends beyond diving incidents to general guest wellbeing at sea.
