Kalong Island

Kalong Island — The Flying Fox Sunset Spectacle

Watch thousands of flying foxes leave their daytime roost at sunset — one of nature's great migration spectacles, witnessed from the deck of your liveaboard.

About Kalong

A Sunset Like No Other

Kalong — the Indonesian word for “fruit bat” — is a low, mangrove-fringed island in the northern reaches of Komodo National Park, and home to one of the great unsung wildlife spectacles of eastern Indonesia. Tens of thousands of flying foxes roost in its dense mangroves through the heat of the day, hanging like dark fruit from the branches, almost invisible until the light begins to fade. These are not small bats: they are giant fruit-eating mammals with leathery wingspans approaching a metre and a half, and they leave their roost every evening to feed on the fruiting trees of the Flores mainland.

Liveaboards drop anchor in the sheltered, current-free water off Kalong roughly an hour before sunset, positioned for the show. As the sky burns through orange into deep red and violet, the colony begins to stir — first a handful, then a ribbon, then an unbroken river of silhouettes pouring off the island and streaming directly overhead. The exodus can last 30 to 45 minutes, the bats passing in waves against the colour, close enough to hear the leathery beat of their wings. It is hypnotic, slightly primeval, and quietly one of the most memorable hours of the entire voyage.

There is no landing on Kalong itself — the experience belongs entirely to the water. Most boats serve dinner on deck as the spectacle unfolds, so you watch the migration with a plate in hand and the day’s last warmth on your skin. Many vessels then stay anchored for the night, and with zero light pollution the show simply continues overhead as the Milky Way emerges.

What to Expect

At Kalong Island

Sunset Spectacle

Thousands of flying foxes streaming across red-orange skies for 30-45 minutes.

Calm Anchorage

Sheltered waters with minimal current — comfortable for dinner on deck.

Dinner During Show

Most boats serve dinner on deck during the bat exodus — an unforgettable meal.

Photography Challenge

Low light + fast movement = a fun challenge. Wide aperture, ISO 1600+.

Wildlife Education

Local guides explain the ecology of flying foxes and their role in Komodo's ecosystem.

Stargazing After

Anchor for the night and stargaze with zero light pollution — Milky Way usually visible.

Visit at a Glance

Practical Information

Location
North Komodo NP
Best Time
5:30–7:00 PM
Activity
Sunset viewing
Photography
Challenging, rewarding
Anchorage
Calm, overnight
Bonus
Stargazing
Dinner Under a Sky Full of Wings
The Evening Spectacle

Dinner Under a Sky Full of Wings

There is a particular hush that falls across the boat as the light starts to go at Kalong. Cameras come out, conversation drops, and everyone drifts to the rail. Then the first bats lift — and within minutes the sky is a moving river of silhouettes pouring overhead against a furnace of orange and violet. It is the kind of natural theatre that no itinerary can promise and no photograph quite captures.

What makes the Kalong evening so memorable is the setting: dinner served on deck, the anchorage glass-calm, the colony streaming past for the better part of an hour. As the last wings fade the stars take over — no light pollution for a hundred miles — and many travelers linger long after the plates are cleared, simply lying back on the deck watching the Milky Way wheel overhead. It is the perfect, quiet finale to a day in the park.

Kalong in Pictures

Sunset, Bats and Starlight

The flying-fox exodus, the calm anchorage and dinner on deck — a glimpse of an evening at Kalong Island.

Flying foxes over Kalong Island
Flying foxes over Kalong Island
Dinner served on deck
Dinner served on deck
A calm sunset anchorage
A calm sunset anchorage
Watching from the upper deck
Watching from the upper deck
Guests enjoying the spectacle
Guests enjoying the spectacle
Sailing on toward the roost
Sailing on toward the roost
Ready to Set Sail?

Watch the Kalong Sunset

Standard on most 3D2N and longer itineraries as the final evening anchorage. Highly recommended.