Where Two Worlds Meet
One of the planet’s most extraordinary invisible boundaries divides the Indonesian archipelago. This invisible boundary is the Wallace Line, identified by the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace in the 19th century, a biogeographical divide it separates the wildlife of Asia from that of Australia and Oceania.
To the west of the Wallace Line lie Asian species such as orangutans, monkeys, elephants, and hornbills. To the east of the line we see cockatoos, marsupials, and endemic wildlife that are found nowhere else on Earth. What makes the Wallace Line so astonishing is how suddenly the transition happens. The line runs between Bali and Lombok, separated by only a narrow strait, the ecosystems and nature of these 2 islands become distinct and different. The same occurs between Borneo and Sulawesi. Deep ocean trenches have prevented species from crossing for millions of years, allowing two different worlds of nature to evolve side by side.
For travellers, this is not simply science. It creates an opportunity for one of the rare journeys on Earth where one can quite literally travel between evolutionary realms. And few collections of boutique hospitality reveal this wonder more beautifully than the Secret Retreats collection of hotels, retreats, yachts and phinisi that are located across Indonesia and the eastern archipelago.
Bali and Lombok: At the Threshold of Wallace’s Line
The journey begins in Bali, with its unique Hindu culture and volcanic landscapes and still part of the Asian ecological world.
At Tugu Bali, guests step into a world of Indonesian artistry, mythology, antiques, and old-world romance, this beautiful property is a living tribute to the artistic and cultural soul of the archipelago.
In the cool highlands of North Bali, Sanak Retreat Bali reveals another side of the island, here volcanic mountains, rice terraces, and village life remain deeply connected to Bali’s ancient rhythms and agricultural heritage.
Along Bali’s quieter western shores, Kelapa Retreat & Spa embraces the island’s elemental beauty, where black volcanic sands, ocean breezes, and tropical forests evoke the raw natural forces that have shaped these islands over millennia.
Meanwhile, in the spiritual valley landscapes of Sidemen, Surya Shanti Villa Sidemen offers an immersion into Bali’s sacred traditions, where temples, rice fields, and mist-covered hills reflect the island’s enduring harmony between nature and spirituality.
But crossing the Lombok Strait changes the story.
At Tugu Lombok and Slow Gili Lombok, travellers arrive at the edge of the Wallacea region as it is known, the transitional zone between Asia and Oceania. Here, reefs become richer, landscapes wilder, and wildlife increasingly Australasian in character.
Island hopping here, is travelling between worlds.
Borneo: The Ancient Asian Rainforest
Further west, the jungles of Borneo remain one of Asia’s last great wildernesses.
With WOW Borneo Cruises, travellers journey deep into Kalimantan’s rainforest rivers where orangutans, proboscis monkeys, and hornbills still thrive beneath ancient jungle canopies.
These forests belong firmly to the Asian side of the Wallace Line, connected long ago to mainland Asia during prehistoric ice ages.
It was within these islands and seas that Wallace first began noticing the remarkable differences in wildlife distribution that would later transform scientific understanding of evolution.
Sulawesi and Manado: The Heart of Wallacea
Nowhere does the Wallace Line feel more alive than in North Sulawesi.
Around Manado lies Wallacea itself, here lies a strange and beautiful meeting point of Asian and Australasian ecosystems. Isolated for millions of years, extraordinary wildlife has evolved on Sulawesi, it is home to spectral tarsiers, black crested macaques, bear cuscus, and rare endemic birds that are found nowhere else on Earth.
At Gangga Island Resort & Spa, guests experience one of Indonesia’s richest marine environments between Bunaken, Bangka Island, and the Lembeh Strait.
Above water, volcanic islands shelter rare wildlife. Beneath the surface, the biodiversity becomes even more astonishing with mimic octopus, flamboyant cuttlefish, pygmy seahorses, frogfish, and surreal coral ecosystems shaped by the powerful ocean currents.
This is evolution in its most vivid, vibrant, and varied form.
Sailing the Invisible Frontier
The journey becomes even more profound aboard one of the beautiful phinisi yachts of Silolona Sojourns, whose handcrafted voyages sail through Manado and the remote eastern Indonesian archipelago.
As travellers move eastward across Wallacea, the transformation becomes increasingly visible. Asian fauna slowly disappears and is replaced by wildlife and ecosystems that have more in common with Australasia than Asia.
The marine world also changes dramatically as the voyage enters the Coral Triangle, a place that is considered the global epicentre of marine biodiversity.
A journey aboard Silolona is therefore much more than a luxurious cruise aboard a beautiful yacht. It is also a voyage through deep natural history itself.
The Wonder of Wallacea
Today, the region between Bali and Sulawesi is known as Wallacea, it is one of the most biologically fascinating places on Earth, where two great evolutionary realms meet.
But beyond science, the Wallace Line reminds us that our world is home to invisible borders, ancient migrations, and islands that shaped life itself.
The spirit of discovery lies at the heart of Secret Retreats. From Bali’s spiritual valleys to the rainforests of Borneo and the volcanic seas of Sulawesi, these journeys reveal not only beautiful destinations, but the deeper stories of nature, culture, and evolution woven across Asia’s hidden frontiers.
And perhaps that is the true magic of Wallacea.
Not simply witnessing beauty, but travelling between worlds.