Monday, August 31, 2009

1

Bunaken Join Patrol

Join Patrol System

Started at March 2004:
4 systems being develop :

  1. Bunaken – ManadoTua Patrols
  2. South Patrols
  3. Molas–Wori Patrols
  4. Mantehage–Nain Patrols

Personnel :

AREA
Community
Rangers
Water police

Bunaken– ManadoTua
24
9
4

South
18
9
2

Molas–Wori
10
12
2

Mantehage– Nain
15
6
2

Results:

  • Severals fish bombing cases been processed in court and fish bombing activities reduced dramatically inside the park since 2004
  • Life reef fish pen inside the park (result from cyanide fishing) been dismantled with several compressors confiscated and been trialed
  • Several dugongs, green turtles and hawksbill turtle been released.
  • Zonation violation reduced
  • Mangroves cutters and seller network cracked and confiscated thousands of mangroves trees
  • Better coordination with the Fisheries Department that now the permits for fishing in North Sulawesi exclude the National Park.

0

Bunaken Entrance Fee System

  • Based on ground-breaking provincial laws, with agreement of PHKA (Dept of Nature Conservation)
  • Fees reflect value of resource to user (willingness to pay)
  • Designed with aspirations of tourism sector:
    • Practical and efficient system that does not inconvenience visitors, dive operators, or patrol team.
    • No per dive/ala carte charges – one time fee!
    • Revenues must remain with the park for local conservation programs
  • Dual system
    • Foreign guests (numbered plastic tags): Rp 150,000/year (~$15)
    • Local guests (ticket) Rp 2500/trip (~$.25)
  • Distribution of entrance fee revenues
    • 80% BNPMAB–specifically for Bunaken conservation programs
    • 20% local government – North Sulawesi, Minahasa district, Manado city, Jakarta
  • Soft opening on 15 March 2001 – with auction
  • Fully operational by 3 May 2001 after extensive socialization to tourism sector (meetings, articles, FAQ sheets, announcements, billboards).
  • Entrance gates, patrol system to check compliance.
  • In first year, collected ~$42,000 from 5194 foreign visitors and 9872 local visitors.
  • In 2002, increased entrance fee from Rp 75,000/year to Rp 150,000/year
  • Added one-day ticket for foreigners (~$7.5/day)
  • Almost tripled the proceeds from 2001 with 2002 revenues of $109,305.

Visitors in Bunaken NP

Entrance Fee System Summary

0

Bunaken Maps

  • Bunaken NP Map
  • Marine Ecotourism Development Map

Thursday, August 20, 2009

1

Diving Center in Manado Bunaken

Bastianos Resort and Diving
Jl. Ccokroaminoto 19
ph. 0431 864025, 853566
Fax. 0431-858454
Email: info@bastianos.com
Website: www.bastianos.com

Nusantara Diving Center & Resort
JL. Pantai Molas PO BOX 1015 Manado
Ph. 0431 - 863992
Fax. 0431 – 860368

Blue Banter Marina (Ritzy Hotel)
Tour and Dive Center
Jl. Piere Tendean Boulevard Manado
Ph. 0431-863302, Fax 0431-862135
Email: info@bluebanter_manado.com
website: www.bluebanter_manado.com

Sea Breeze Diving & Resort
Jl. Piere tendean No. 89 Manado
Ph. 0431 - 859379, 3306034
Fax. 0431 - 859368
Email: info@indopacificdivers.com
Website: www.bunakendivers.com

Bunaken Cha Cha Dive
Bunaken Island, PO Box 1316
Ph. 0431-3307293
Fax. 0431-862135
Email: info@bunakenchacha.com
Website: www.bunakenchacha.com
Scubana Divers

Pulau Liang Bunaken
Ph. 08124401566 – 08124493705

Bunaken Divers
Jl. Piere Tendean no 89 Manado
Ph. 0431 - 859379
Fax. 0431 - 3319411
Website: www.bunakendivers.com
Sulawesi Dive Quest
PO Box 1030 Manado 95000
Ph 0431-863023, 08124417676
Email: bunaken@sulawes_dive_quest.com
website: www.sulawesi_dive_quest.com

Celebes Divers & Mapia
Jl. Tanawangko PO Box 1014
Kalasey Manado
Ph. 0431 - 826582
Fax. 0431- 826581
Website : www.kudalaut.com

Siladen Resort & Spa
Pulau Siladen Manado
Ph/Fax: 0431-858820
email: info@siladen.com
website: www.siladen.com
ECO Divers
PO BOX 1618 Manado 95016
Ph. 0431- 824445
Fax. 0431 - 823444
Email: Jim.yanny@eco-divers.com
Website: www.eco-divers.com

Samurinda Paradise Diving Resort
Kel. Bahu Malalayang Manado
Ph. 823318, 825248

Froggie Divers
PO BOX 1520 Manado 95016
Email: manado@divefroggies.com
Website: www.eco-divers.com

Thalassa Dive Center (Santika Hotel)
PO BOX 95013
Ph. 0431-850230
Fax. 850231
Email: info@thalassa.net
website: www.thalassa.net

Gangga Island Resort & Diving
PO BOX 1734 Manado 95375
Ph. 0431 - 8884009
Email: info@ganggaisland.com
website: www.ganggaisland.com

Two fish Divers
Jl. Sam Ratulangi XIX No 12
Ph. 0811438085
email: info@twofishdivers.com
website: www.twofishdivers.com

Living Colours Dive Resort
Jack Alto PO Box 2406 Manado
Telp. 08124306063
Email: info@livingcoloursdiving.com
Website: www.livingcoloursdiving.com

La Racasse Diving Center
Jl. Raya Tanawangko Kalasey
ph. 0431-838970
Fax. 0431-838965
email: mail@larascasse.com
website: www.larascasse.com

MC Dive Bunaken & Resort
Pulau Pangalisang Bunaken
Email: info@mcdivebunaken.com
Website: www.mcdivebunaken.com
EURO Diving Center (Sedona hotel)
Ds. Tateli Minahasa
Ph. 0431-825888

Kima Bajo Resort diving Center
Ds.Wori, Minahasa Utara
Ph. 0431 - 860999
Fax 0431-861333

Ocean Star Diving
P. Pangalisang Bunaken
Gangga Resort Diving Center
Likupang, Minahasa utara
Minahasa Prima dive & Resort
Mokupa Minahasa

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Bunaken Beautiful Beach

Beach always provide beautiful scenery for Us. And also we can do many attractive and challenging activity in the beach, such as swim, play sand, sunbathing and also stroll while enjoying the scenery or the sun with your beloved. Have you thought to try unusual something? May be have desire to walk on the water, enjoy the scenery under the sea with your partner? If the answer is yes and you want to disturb the satisfaction of the first experiment, go to the Bunaken Marine Park and try adventurous dive. Bunaken beach is located in Indonesia archipelago especially in north Sulawesi island. Sulawesi island is located in east Indonesia. The capital of north Sulawesi is Manado. If you from abroad and want to reach Bunaken beach, you should arrive at Sam Ratulangi Airport in Manado and then go to Bunaken beach by taxi, rent car or other public transportation.

For your comfort during in Bunaken, order lodging and dive packages away the previous day. For lodging, there are many resort that available in this beach area. The resort is equipped with support facilities that support your comfort such as clean water, electricity, bathroom and western style toilet, a comfortable mattress with mosquito net and fan, wireless Internet connection, also bars and restaurants open. Bastiano’s, Bunaken Village, Cha Cha, Daniel’s Homestay, Panorama, Scubana Dive Cottage, Seabreeze Resort, Two Fish, and is the name of a diving resort in the 2 point dive in Bunaken Island, Liang beach and beach Pangalisang.

Election time and dive packages also determine your final satisfaction. For you who want privacy, choose the package that is only 1 group of 3 people, 1 guide and 2 participants. There are many service providers to rent equipment and dive guide that available, including Barracuda, Celebes Divers, Eco Divers, dolphin Diving, Murex, Nusantara Diving Center and Odyssea Divers. It is a good idea to compare or consult you about the dive packages offered by service providers in the sixth.

High purity water in fact can not be predicted and it is very dependent on weather conditions. The best time to dive is in the morning up to afternoon during the dry season months between May to October. Besides the possibility of a rain storm and is very small, in this season the abundant of sun rays add the romantic of Bunaken marine theater below.

When diving, you will enjoy the tranquility under the sea of heaven in Bunaken Island. Albeit without a vote, multiformity of the bright colors of coral and fish feel fun about life there. You can stroke the fish that swim around your pampered, and feel really exciting.

Never miss attraction of clown fish who run and hiding behind each other anemon vessel. Do not miss the details of interesting details in the circus under the sea such as sea Horses moving the flow, the stars and sea snail with a variety of spectacular colors, and fish shaped like a helicopter. If you are lucky, you will also feel the sensation of coming stir a giant hammer ray fish or sharks are large.

To save the romantic memories for you dive, you can bring a special camera down in the water or rent a service provider tools dives. However, if your holiday budget is limited, both in the memories dive Bunaken Island beach surely not easily forgotten. Heaven holiday in Bunaken will be romantic moment that ever be missed.

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Bunaken Ekosistem

Bocah Bunaken

Bunaken National Marine Park is promoted as an ideal mix of  tourism and conservation, but not all local people agree.

Pak Victor is a fisher living in the main village of Bunaken Island in Bunaken National Marine Park. Like most villagers, he mainly fishes for pelagic (open ocean) species, but during the monsoon he fishes for reef species nearer the shore. He says, ‘We have to go further to catch pelagics than in the past because of overfishing by foreign boats with more modern technology… It’s also harder to get reef fish because there are so many tourists diving in the water.’ Victor wants protection from offshore foreign fishing fleets and some nearshore fishers’ destructive practices such as blast and cyanide fishing. But can eco-tourism protect the livelihoods of local people like Victor as well as conserving the local environment?

Bunaken National Marine Park, located in North Sulawesi, is one of Indonesia’s most successful examples of combining coral reef conservation with economic growth, by developing eco-tourism. Established in 1991 by the Indonesian government, the park nests in the heart of the Coral Triangle, home to some of the richest marine biodiversity in the world. In the interests of both the 30,000 people that live within park boundaries and the dive tourism industry, park managers aim to sustain a healthy reef system.

After its establishment, USAID, the US government aid agency, began to support ecotourism in the park. From USAID’s perspective, eco-tourism in Bunaken offers a model of decentralising coastal resource management by involving the local community and forging partnerships with the private sector.

Eco-tourism, part of a sustainable development paradigm, has social and ecological goals. It aims to elicit beneficiaries’ participation in a way that can help reduce poverty and at the same time support biodiversity.
One key assumption in this paradigm is that poverty is a cause of environmental destruction and that economic growth can help both people and the environment.

Eco-tourists who visit Bunaken are fond of the idea that they are helping to protect the local environment and eradicate poverty. But are they really doing so? In Bunaken the stated aims of eliciting community participation and eradicating poverty been overlooked in the rush to secure economic growth by seeking foreign private capital investment. As a result, many local fishers are relegated to the rank of lowly labourers for foreign owned dive operators and the park management board.

Participation?

Bunaken National Marine Park has received international awards for local participation, sustainable funding mechanisms and biodiversity conservation. Its multi-stakeholder management board was created to combine private tourism interests, NGOs, government representatives and local park residents in both managing the park entrance fee and sharing in decision-making processes. To minimise user group conflict, fishing zones are distinct from tourism zones and fishers and dive operators negotiated to determine which zones would be located where.
Within the park’s predefined eco-tourism agenda, what does participation mean? Village representatives sit on the management board. Yet many Bunaken villagers feel that park rules do not represent their interests. One fisher says, ‘No one who disagrees with park rules sits on the park management board.’ Similarly, an NGO representative says, ‘I don’t go to meetings anymore because I already know the outcome.’

Growth at any cost

The success of tourism in the park has had unintended effects for local fishers. In the past 20 years, the waters around the main island where tourism and management occur have largely been transformed from a working to a recreational seascape. While sustainable fishing practices are encouraged in the park’s community use zones, the relationship between fishing and the park is ambiguous at best.

From a cursory perusal of the zonation map of Bunaken Island it appears that the zone set aside for the community is larger than the tourism zone, but this is not the case. Community zones actually have fewer target fish species (the species that fishers desire) than tourism zones. The space in which fishing can occur becomes even smaller when we are told that community zones include tourism use, while recreational zones exclude local fishers. Allowing everyone access to this space disadvantages fishers as they must compete with tourists for access to marine resources.

Before the 1960s, Bunaken’s waters were mainly made up of small-scale fishers. In 1980 the governor of North Sulawesi declared Bunaken Island a Tourism Object of Manado. Indonesians began opening small homestays. In the 1980s, more established dive operators from Europe and the United States, with bigger capital backing, began to open resorts. In the past ten years, resorts on both Bunaken Island and the mainland have become larger and more focused on pre-paid package deals.

On Bunaken Island, this corresponded with a shift in resort ownership from Indonesian-owned resorts to foreign-owned resorts. Despite park stakeholders’ best intentions, the occupations of local people on Bunaken Island have largely shifted away from nearshore fishing and independent tourism activities such as tour guiding, boat chartering and homestay ownership. Many of these people are now employed as wage laborers by either foreign-owned dive resorts or by the park. In these dive operations, better paying jobs tend to be held by mainlanders from Manado and Minahasa, who are often better educated.

One Bunaken Island homestay owner whose business is suffering said, ‘The park only uses Bunaken people to collect the bins and pick up garbage. We’re only staff – we don’t have a say! We aren’t leaders! Bunaken people don’t work for the [park management board]. The salaries for all these people come from Bunaken but Bunaken people don’t get anything!’

Recently, even many of the foreigners who own smaller resorts have started to feel threatened by more powerful interests. As foreign live-aboard dive boats and larger resorts enter the area, smaller operators and park officials worry about the negative impacts of expanding tourism, and have commissioned dive carrying capacity studies in the area. Similar to the protection desired by fishers, smaller dive operators now desire protection from larger foreign competitors.

Many foreign donors have responded to the call for eco-tourism as a route to both conservation and poverty reduction. As a result, coral reef tourism will only grow in the coming years in Indonesia. We must ask ourselves if this strategy of economic growth is the answer to poverty and to the destruction of coral reefs. Is a successful marine park defined by its ability to open up a coastal space to international capital? In the case of Bunaken National Marine Park, it has resulted in the disenfranchisement of many local fishers with questionable effects for long-term ecological sustainability.

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Dive Manado Tua

Manado Tua non active volcano is an Island  at about 35 min. boat ride from Kima Bajo Resort.

There are several diving sites around it. My favorite one is Pangulingan as we can often see some school of jacks, bat fish, napoleon wrasse, reef sharks and lots of fusilier.

The sloping reef reaches until 35m after that the drop off starts and goes down more than 70m deep. The visibility is all year around between 20-30m. As this diving site is right in the corner of the island often we can have currents coming from different directions, therefore we can go there just when conditions are favorable. However, during your week of diving we should be able to find the right conditions to go there.

big eye jackfish.jpg

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Sail Bunaken Photos FLEET REVIEW


KRI HASANUDIN


Black hawk diatas kapal induk


hornet take off








Monday, August 17, 2009

0

Bunaken Foto On Agust



diving spot:

Friday, August 7, 2009

0

List of Hotels in Bitung Bunaken

PEVILY HOTEL
Watutumou Kec. Kalawat, Minahasa Utara
Jl. Manado – Bitung

Phone
:
0431 – 813669

TRANSITO HOTEL
Desa Kawangkoan Jaga III Kec. Kalawat
Minahasa Utara

Phone
:
0431 – 891633

CANDRA LESTARI HOTEL
Sulawaan Kalawat
Jl. Manado – Bitung

Phone
:
0431 – 891169

Fax
:
0431 – 891662

JENN HOUSE
Aermadidi Jl. Manado – Bitung
Minahasa Utara

Phone
:
0431 – 892710

PENGINAPAN PONDOK INDAH
Manembo - Nembo Atas, Bitung

Phone
:
0438 - 38226

KUNGKUNGAN BAY RESORT
Kel. Tandu Rusa

Phone
:
0438 – 30300

NALENDRA HOTEL
Kel. Winenet

Phone
:
0438 – 30403

FATAMORGANA
Kel. Winenet

Phone
:
0438 – 21227

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List of Hotels in Manado Bunaken

Five 5 Stars

HOTEL SEDONA
Jl. Raya Tanawangko. Tateli
Kec. Pineleng Kab. Minahasa, Sulawesi Utara. Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 825 888

Fax
:
(62-431) 825 999

Email
:
sales.marketing@sedona-manado.com

Website
:
www.sedona.com

Four 4 Stars

KIMA BAJO RESORT & SPA
Desa Kima Bajo Kec. Wori Kab. Minahasa Utara

Phone
:
(62-431) 3308085, 3308086

Fax
:
(62-431) 841841

Email
:
info@kimabajo.com

Website
:
www.kimabajo.com

THE RITZY HOTEL
Jl. Piere Tendean Boulevard Manado 95111

Phone
:
(62-431) 855 555

Fax
:
(62-431) 868 888

Email
:
info@ritzymanado.com

Website
:
www.ritzymanado.com

HOTEL SANTIKA PREMIERE RESORT
Tongkaina-Bunaken P.O. Box 1644 Manado 95000 – INDONESIA

Phone
:
(62-431) 858 222, 858 333

Fax
:
(62-431) 858 666

Email
:
manadoresort@santika.com

 

Three 3 Stars

HOTEL GRAN PURI
Jl. Sam Ratulangi No.458 Manado
North Sulawesi – Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 822888

Fax
:
(62-431) 858892

Email
:
hotel@granpuri.com

QUALITY HOTEL
Jl. Piere Tendean No.88-89
Boulevard Manado North Sulawesi. Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 888 3 888

Fax
:
(62-431) 888 1111

SMS Instant Reservation : 0815 2390 8888

Email
:
qltmnd@qualityhotelmanado.com

Website
:
www.qualityhotelmanado.com

HOTEL SAHID KAWANUA
Jl. Sam Ratulangi No. 1 Manado 95122
Sulawesi Utara – Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 867777

Fax
:
(62-431) 865220

SAHID HOTEL
Jl. Babe palar I, Manado 95119
Sulawesi Utara – Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 851688, 852688

Fax
:
(62-431) 863326, 852688

Email
:
sahidmdo@indosat.net.id

Two 2 Stars

HOTEL FORMOSA
Kompleks Pertokoan Manado Mall
Jl. W. Monginsidi No.1 Blok NW Bahu
Manado 95115 Indonesia

Phone
:
(62-431) 854 555

Fax
:
(62-431) 841933

Email
:
info@hotelformosa.co.id

Website
:
www.hotelformosa.co.id

TASIK RIA RESORT
Jl. Raya Trans Sulawesi Tasik Ria 95351

Phone
:
(62-431) 824445

Fax
:
(62-431) 823444

Email
:
info@tasikria.com

Website
:
www.eco-divers.com

MINAHASA PRIMA RESORT
Jl. Trans Sulawesi – Tasik Ria, Manado 95351

Phone
:
(62-431) 838468, 838478

Fax
:
(62-431) 838504

Email
:
minahasaprimaresort@yahoo.com

Website
:
www.hotelprimagrup.com

 

One 1 Stars

NEW QUEEN HOTEL
Jl. Wakeke 12 – 14 Manado 9511

Phone
:
(62-431) 855551, 853022

Fax
:
(62-431) 853049, 864440

Website
:
www.newqueenhotelmanado.com

0

Accommodation and Transportation Bunaken

Hot Water Pool at Koya Village, West Tandano

On the island you have the choice amongst a number of homestays, with rates starting at around Rp. 50 000 per day and person incl. fullboard. If you only go for the cheapest option don't complain afterwards if the water in your mandi (bathroom) doesn't get filled up regularly, or food isn't quite as nice as you had hoped for. Life in North Sulawesi in general isn't as cheap as in other regions of Indonesia, and most things on Bunaken have to be brought in from Manado.

Depending on the season even fish can be pretty expensive. Better think twice before you try to bargain down prices which are already cheap; for the locals it could mean the difference between being able to eat 3 or only 2 meals a day, or buying school books for the children or not.

Some of the dive operations on Bunaken are offering more upmarket accommodation with running water ((Living Colours) and even hot showers (Cha Cha Nature Resort).
Bunaken's much smaller neighbour Siladen only offers few accommodations. Most popular among budget travelers seems to be Martha's Homestay.

The most upmarket resort within the boundaries of the Bunaken National Park is Siladen Resort & Spa which started operations in 2003. The eco-friendly luxury boutique resort places high emphasis on the protection of the Marine Park and the environment.

The public boats from Manado to Bunaken are leaving daily around 2 p.m (depending on tide), except Sundays, from Pasar Jengki near Manado harbour. Back from Bunaken to Manado usually early in the morning, around 7-8 a.m. Even on Sundays there might be boats, just go to the harbor and ask people there. To charter a boat is about Rp. 150,000 - 200,000 OW. If you want to go to Siladen it is better to inquire first at the harbour, but usually there are several boats as well. The fare to Siladen is also Rp. 15 000.

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Bunaken National Park Entrance Fee

All visitors to the Bunaken National Park (divers and non-divers) are required to pay an entrance fee, in accordance with North Sulawesi Provincial Government Provincial Law Number 9/2002. The entrance fee for foreign visitors is Rp 50,000 per daily ticket (approximately US$6), or Rp 150,000 (approximately US$17) for a waterproof plastic entrance tag valid for the full calendar year.
Entrance tags and tickets can be purchased direct from all NSWA members, or from ticket counters on Bunaken Island and on Siladen Island. They must be carried at all times that guests' are within the park boundaries, and tags can easily be affixed to guests' diving or snorkeling gear or on backpacks. Enforcement of the entrance fee system is conducted via spot checks by park rangers on land and at sea.
The entrance fee system has been adapted from the well-known Bonaire Marine Park system, and the proceeds from the sales of the entrance tags are managed by the Bunaken National Park Management Advisory Board (BNPMAB), a multi-stakeholder board that NSWA is a member of. The system has been very successful in raising over $250,000 for conservation programs in the Bunaken Marine Park since its inception in 2001.

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General Information Bunaken National Marine Park

The Bunaken National Marine Park was formally established in 1991 and is among the first of Indonesia's growing system of marine parks. The park covers a total surface area of 89,065 hectares, 97% of which is overlain by sparkling clear, warm tropical water. The remaining 3% of the park is terrestrial, including the five islands of Bunaken, Manado Tua, Mantehage, Nain and Siladen. Although each of these islands has a special character, it is the aquatic ecosystem that attracts most naturalists. The waters of Bunaken National Marine Park are extremely deep (1566 m in Manado Bay), clear (up to 35-40 m visibility), refreshing in temperature (27-29 C) and harbor some of the highest levels of biodiversity in the world. Pick any of group of interest - corals, fish, echinoderms or sponges - and the number of families, genera or species is bound to be astonishingly high. For example, 7 of the 8 species of giant clams that occur in the world, occur in Bunaken. The park has around 70 genera of corals; compare this t oa mere 10 in Hawaii. Although the exact number of fish species is unknown, it may be slightly higher than in the Philippines, where 2,500 species, or nearly 70% of all fish species known to the Indo-western Pacific, are found.

Oceanic currents may explain, in part, why Bunaken National Marine Park is such a treasure trove of biodiversity. Northeasternly currents generally sweep through the park but abundant counter currents and gyros related to lunar cycles are believed to be a trap for free swimming larvae. This is particularly true on the south side of the crescent-shaped Bunaken Island, lying in the heart of the park. A snorkler or diver in the vicinity of Lekuan or Fukui may spot over 33 species of butterfly fish and numerous types of groupers, damsels, wrasses and gobies. The gobies, smallish fish with bulging eyes and modified fins that allow them to attach to hard surfaces, are the most diverse but least known group of fish in the park.
Biologists believe that the abundance of hard corals is crucial in maintaining the high levels of diversity in the park. Hard corals are the architects of the reefs, without them, numerous marine organisms would be homeless and hungry. Many species of fish are closely associated with particular types of corals (folious, branching, massives, etc.) for shelter and egg-laying. Others, like the enormous Bumphead Parrotfish, Balbometopon muricatum, are "coralivores" and depend on hard corals for their sustenance. Bony mouth parts fused into an impressive "beak" allow these gregarious fish to crunch corals like roasted peanuts.
Some 20,000 people live on the natural resources of Bunaken National Marine Park. Although there are inevitable conflicts between resource protection and use by people, the Indonesian government is taking a fairly unusual and pragmatic approach to park management. The idea is to promote wise resource use while preventing overexploitation. Local communities, government officials, dive resort operators, local nature groups, tourists and scientists have played an active role in developing exclusive zones for diving, wood collection, fishing and other forms of utilization. If successful, Bunaken Marine Park will stand as an important example of how Sulawesi, and the rest of Indonesia, can work to protect its natural resources.

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Bunaken National Marine Park

The natural beauty and marine diversity of Bunaken Sea Park in North Sulawesi Utara have long been admired by marine lovers from all over the world, including divers, surfers, tourists through to marine biodiversity researchers!
Make your marine move and join in the international event at the so-called Land of Palm Trees. Your company participation is a significant contribution to the living up of marine love and spirit to show "Jalesveva Jayamahae" (On the Sea We’re Victorious).
Golden opportunities are wide open for you and your esteemed company to take an active part, as well as exploring effective business support and networking.

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Photo Gallery Sail Bunaken 2009

Sail Bunaken 2009 Grand Launching on May 19, 2009 at Atrium Hotel - Jakarta

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Tentative Agenda Sail Bunaken 2009

August 09 - 12, 2009
Warships, Tallships, Yacht Arrived at Bitung, North Sulawesi

August 13, 2009
Welcome Party by Mayor of Bitung

August 16, 2009
Bunaken Carnival

August 14 - 17, 2009
Openships

August 14 - 16, 2009

a)
Diving Tournament at Bunaken

b)
Dinghy Race at Manado Bay (TBA)

c)
Jetski Rally From Makassar to Manado (TBC)

d)
Sandeq Race (TBA)

August 17, 2009

a)
AM : Indonesia's Independence Parade at Governor's house, all Captain's are invited

b)
PM : Dive Tour to Bunaken

c)
PM : Sunset Cocktail Party / Gala Dinner, Prize Presentation and Cultural Show, hosted by Governor

August 18, 2009

a)
AM : Free Tour for participants, supported and facilitated by province and Regent Government (TBA)

b)
PM : Open Stage Music & Cultural Shows at Mando or Bitung (TBA)

August 19, 2009
Sail Parade at Selat Lembeh. All Vessels are Salute to the President of The Republic of Indonesia

August 20, 2009
All Vessels Leave Bitung

Monday, August 3, 2009

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Diving Competition & Festival

Diving competition will be participated by Indonesian national diving atlet and professional divers from all over Indonesia. The Festival will consist of various competitions and fun games.
Detailed Agenda

1.
PB POSSI 2009 National Diving Competition

Venue
:
Mega Mas Beach

Date
:
August 12 - 15, 2009

Time
:
08.00 - finish

2.
Underwater Photography Contes

Theme
:
White Angel WO Micro / Macro

Venue
:
Bunaken Beach

Date
:
August 14 – 15, 2009

Time
:
10.00 - finish

3.
Clean Beach and Ocean Campaign

4.
Underwater National Flag Hoisting
(Breaking the World's Diving Record)

Venue
:
Likuan III (area near Bunaken)

Date
:
August 17, 2009

Time
:
10.00 - finish

Participant
:
Approximately 1250 divers from diving clubs, POSSI and The Indonesian Navy Force (TNI AL)

Coordinated by
PB POSSI (Pengurus Besar Persatuan Olahraga Selam Seluruh Indonesia - Indonesian National Diving Association)
Supported by


North Sulawesi PB POSSI Regional Committee


Indonesia Navy Force - TNI AL


North Sulawesi Government

*) Admission and other information will be updated soon

0

Bunaken International Seafood Festival


Bunaken International Seafood Festival will be participated by ambassadors and chefs from several participating countries. The chefs will demonstrate their skill and prepare their countries seafoods' delicacies.
The event will also held a cooking competition for chef from the participating ships of Indonesian Fleet Review (IFR) 2009.
Date and Venue
August 16 – 18, 2009 at Lapangan Mega Mas, Manado
Agenda


Main Events


Seafood Cuisine Competition


Seafood Cooking Competition


Executive Cooking


Seafood Cooking Demonstrations (cooking with the chef)


Supporting Events


Mocktail Competition


Eating Seafood Competition


Tourism School Demonstrations


Bazaar Seafood Culinary (food and drink)


Other Supporting Events


Wine and Beer (booth)


Mini Stage (booth)


Sea Water Aquarium (booth display)

Coordinated and Supported by


Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fishiries


Ministry of Culture and Tourism


Indonesian Navy Force - TNI AL


Government of North Sulawesi

Registration Form
Download Bunaken International Seafood Festival Participation Form

Contact Information

PT DEBINDO Mega Promo
Jl. Lanto Dg. Pasewang No. 18 F, Makassar

Phone
:
(+62 411) 858353 - 858363 – 858383

Fax
:
(+62 411) 831112

Email
:
debindomks@debindomks.com

Contact Person

Muh rizal : +62 813 860 53324

Secretariat Sail Bunaken 2009
Mina Bahari 2 Building, 17th floor
Jl. Medan Merdeka Timur No. 16
Jakarta Pusat 10110
P.O. Box 3899 JKP 10038

Phone
:
+6221 3519 070 Ext. 7911

*) Admission and other information will be updated soon