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#2A FALKEN | ISLA DEL COCO MISSION


Passage Stats

  • 8 Available

  • Price: $7,100

  • Note: 5% discount on all passages when paid by wire transfer.

  • Distance: ~600 Nautical Miles

  • Total Days: 9

  • Start Port: Playa Flamingo, Costa Rica

  • End Port: Playa Flamingo, Costa Rica

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SYNOPSIS

With FALKEN scheduled to have a mini-offseason in Costa Rica, we figured, hey, let’s do a side mission to Jurassic Park! Isla del Coco is part of Costa Rica, but nobody lives there — it’s one of the most remote national parks in the world, and renowned as a top-ten dive site in the world, and was the inspiration for Jurassic Park’s Isla Nublar. We’ll get there like the pirates did in the Age of Sail — by boat. After exploring the national park for a couple days, we’ll sail back to mainland Costa Rica and back to civilization (hopefully with no dino stowaways!).

Cocos is one of those "you have to sail there to fully experience it" landfalls scattered around the world, and because of it's remoteness, perhaps the most unique. There are no hotels, no marinas, and no permanent residents, just a small ranger station tucked into Chatham Bay. The reward after about two days at sea is extraordinary: dropping anchor off a place so wild and alive it feels like time has stopped. To arrive there by sail — propelled only by wind, guided by the same navigational instincts as the explorers and pirates who once sought refuge there — is to experience Cocos the way it was meant to be experienced: as a hard-won frontier at the edge of the world.

Isla del Coco, or Cocos Island, sits in the Pacific Ocean, roughly 300 nautical miles off Costa Rica’s coast. Uninhabited and shrouded in mist, it’s one of the most remote and pristine national parks on Earth — a UNESCO World Heritage Site protected for its staggering biodiversity both above and below the surface. The island’s steep volcanic cliffs, covered in dense rainforest, rise straight from the sea, fed by dozens of waterfalls that tumble down into turquoise bays. It’s often called the Galápagos of Central America, home to unique species of birds, insects, and marine life that exist nowhere else. Hammerhead sharks, giant mantas, whale sharks, and massive schools of fish make its surrounding waters one of the world’s most famous diving destinations.

Cocos Island has also achieved a kind of mythic status in pop culture. Its wild, prehistoric beauty inspired Michael Crichton and Steven Spielberg when they were imagining Isla Nublar, the fictional island in Jurassic Park. Though the movie wasn’t filmed there, Crichton cited Cocos as the model — a remote, storm-lashed Pacific island cloaked in jungle and mystery. In real life, it’s every bit as cinematic: its cloud forest canopy, thunderous surf, and haunting isolation make it easy to picture a dinosaur rounding the next bend.

typical Weather Pattern

Prevailing winds are likely to be NE to E, 15–22 knots, with a moderate chance of stronger gusts, especially offshore due to Papagayo wind events. Seas expected moderate, 1.5–2.5 m (5–8 ft) offshore, easing to 1–1.5 m (3–5 ft) nearshore; some uncertainty exists regarding short-period wind waves. Sea surface temperatures are expected to range 80–83ºF (27–28ºC), with air temperatures 78–90ºF (26–32ºC), trending slightly cooler at night and offshore.

This weather output is AI-generated, based on publicly available meteorological data and is meant to give a high-level overview of expected conditions; professional forecasting & consulting with our weather-routing partners WRI will be used during the actual passage.

HOW TO JOIN

  • To register, click the 'Sign Up' button anywhere on the site. Complete and submit the form indicating ‘2026 FALKEN | Isla del Coco Mission’ as your preferred passage. 

  • We’ll get back to you within 24-48 hours to confirm bunk availability, send you the long-form crew application & invoice you the 50% deposit to hold your spot. Balance will be due 60 days prior to the trip start date.

  • Payments are non-refundable. You'll be asked to agree to our terms & conditions on your application before submitting the deposit. Please read them carefully.

    • Join the boat at 13:00 on the passage start date. Crew must depart the boat by 12:00 Noon on the passage end date.

    • Make sure you eat lunch before joining! We’ll get straight into bunk assignments & briefings once all crew have arrived.

    • Travel logistics & specific itinerary will be sent in the Passage Newsletter #2 emailed to all crew 2-4 months before passage departure.

  • The crew fee for the passage includes everything you need on the boat, plus use of the following:

    • Helly Hansen 'Inflatable' PFD with integrated harness to use while aboard.

    • Spinlock Double-tether for moving around on deck to use while aboard.

    • All meals, snacks and drinks while on the boat.

    • Sheets, quick-dry towel & a pillow.

    • Large collection of books onboard, including novels, sailing classics and sailing reference books, in hard copy.

    What the price DOESN'T include:

    • Transportation to and from the boat.

    • Meals and drinks ashore.

    • Personal toiletries & clothing.

    • Foul-weather gear (see packing list for details).

  • All 59º North passages are led by qualified RYA / MCA Yachtmaster Ocean-certified skippers & mates. All miles sailed onboard both boats will count towards your own license mileage requirements. We are happy to provide certificates to this effect for your RYA Day Skipper, Yachtmaster or other countries’ sea-time requirements.

  • We now reserve two spots for women on all of our passages! You will not be ‘alone’ when you sail with 59º North. Learn more here.

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#2 FALKEN | La Paz, Mexico — Costa Rica

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17 March

#3 FALKEN | Costa Rica — Galapagos