Khao Lak today - recent photos:
www.travelblog.org/Asia/Thailand/Khao-Lak/blog-109239.html
My brother John was in Khao Lak, southern
Thailand the morning of December 26, 2004 and barely escaped with
his life. Khao Lak was "ground zero" for the Tsunami in Thailand. He
has put together a fantastic site detailing his Tsunami experience -
including "his story", to the second timelines, relevant maps, photos, his emails,
and media coverage. John was staying at Mai's Quiet Zone.
View
his site now
www.sonomacountylaw.com/tsunami
Another friend was in Krabi and watched the devastation as it
happened from a hill. He spent time at a small local hospital
volunteering in the days afterwards. When he finished his
volunteering he raised a substantial of money and personally donated it to
small villages and those most in need.
Another friend decided to get up early that day and was on a hill
above Khao Lak and watched the first waves roll in. Usually this
person sleeps in late while on vacation. Another man watched the
water recede, saw the first white large wave in the distance, had a
gut feeling something was wrong, jumped on his motorcycle and
fortunately had enough time head start to outrun the wave
Other friends fortuitously didn't make it out of Bangkok even though they had
purchased tickets to go to the southern Islands in the days before
the Tsunami. The reason: they were having a suit tailored and the
tailor was late in delivering it so they missed their train.
I met someone who was at his grandchild's birthday party in Florida
when he got the news. He quickly bought a plane ticket and spent 16
days doing body ID and other work for the Tsunami relief center in
Khao Lak. The amount of volunteer work and help people have given
from around the world is simply amazing.
I read about someone who barely survived the Tsunami, only to be
badly injured in the Bangkok Metro accident 2 weeks later (in which
200+ people sustained injuries).
Travel to Thailand during the Immediate Tsunami Aftermath
I personally toured many areas in southern Thailand in the weeks
after the Tsunami including the Phuket Beaches area, Krabi, Ao Nang,
Railey Beach, and Khao Lak. With the brutal exception of Khao Lak
(98% of which was completely wiped off the map) almost ALL the
tourist infrastructure was very well intact in the other areas. Its
sad because the tourist facilities were almost empty and the
businesses were really hurting as a result. Note: even Khao Lak has been built up again and it
was only a matter of a year or two before it has become a tourist magnet once again. There
was absolutely no
good reason to stay away from Thailand in the weeks after the
Tsunami. The beautiful
beaches were empty and good deals could be found at hotels and
restaurants.
Consider visiting:
www.seadragondivecenter.com their shop was unaffected but the
Tsunami, and they posted good updates on their website about the post
Tsunami situation in Khao Lak.
Many of the main tourist areas that were actually affected by the
Tsunami were only affected in the proximity
of the beach - so if you walked a few blocks inland there was
absolutely no sign of Tsunami damage. The exception to this was the Khao Lak
area in which the Tsunami moved inland upwards of 1.5 kilometer+ which
when you think about it, is an incredible distance.
For more recent photos of Khao Lak visit this homepage:
http://homepage.mac.com/patrikbrundin/PhotoAlbum1.html
Tsunami Photographs
Review the following Tsunami related photographs. Photographs of
the dead and other disturbing images have not been posted here.
All photos below were taken by Dave. December 2006 most recent
photos in PDF update/photo form
available here -
courtesy of
Diethelm Travel LTD.
Ao Nang/Railey Beaches
These are some of the most beautiful beaches in Thailand - and
with the the "scare" after the Tsunami, these beaches were empty.
Some damage was evident in these areas, but not nearly the amount
saw at Patong Beach near Phuket. There is simply less infrastructure
here and the height of the wave when it hit was not as high as in
some of the other areas.

Ao Nang Beach |

Near Railey Bch |

Surviving Palms |

Main St. Ao Nang |

Ao Nang Beach
|

Railey Beach |

Railey Beach |

Railey Beach |

Near Railey |

Near Railey |
|