Tuesday, 11 January, 2005 10:43 Global Stringers: Barry
& Lynette Wickett | |
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| Global
Stringers - Barry
and Lynette |
| | Name:
Barry and Lynette Wickett Location: Langkawi,
Malaysia Connection: We used to live at Netley Abbey Distance
from here: 6624 miles |
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Date:
Tuesday, January 11th, 2004 | Things
are slowly getting back to normal here now. Apart from the Island of Phi Phi it
is business as usual here in the area of Phuket and South to Langkawi.
The
Thai people have bounced back with an amazing strength of character and are continuing
with life. I have met and spoken to many local people and a lot have personal
knowledge of people lost or missing. A few have lost family or friends.
However
just over 2 weeks on, and the most tragic thing that is happening here now is
that in the height of the tourist season here where the majority of locals rely
in some way or other on thousands of visitors coming from Europe and else where.
No one is coming. This area has suffered badly the last few years with visitors
not coming because of Bali bombing, Sars, etc and now this.
The relief
funds have been wonderful and I am sure the money will filter thru to the people
on the ground sooner or later but probably the best help anyone could give these
people now is to continue with travel plans to SE Asia and if a holiday is booked
later in the season do not cancell!! As far as the yachting community is concerned,
life goes on as normal with cruisers catching up on boat jobs repairing wave damage
etc. The annual migration to the Red Sea has begun and we have seen off some good
cruising friends on the way to Europe and the next adventure.
Barry
& Lynette |
Date:
Friday, December 31, 2004 | Dear
All
First of all thank you all for the many concerned e-mails we have
just read. What we have seen on the news makes us very very fortunate to be around
at all.
After a wonderful Christmas day we were still anchored off a very
small Thai island called Ko Kradan. We were planning to motor over to a big island
with a huge cave system that you can swim into a huge lagoon inside the island.
I had left my sunglasses up at the resort where we had had Christmas dinner the
night before so Barry took me into the small beach and I walked up the high path.
I got my glasses and had a swim when I reached the beach waiting for Barry to
collect me, we went back to our boat and went over to our friends boat for coffee.
Dawn and I were just drinking our coffee when we noticed the water boiling
and bubbling all around the rocks and looked about to see what was happening,
we called the men up in the cockpit and just then Dawn's boat a big 60ft yacht,
started to spin round and round very fast. Barry and I saw Kay Sira (our 42ft
sailing ketch) rising up very high and then I saw the wave that only showed its
height about 2 boat lengths behind Kay Sira. I then saw a local island tour boat
just cartwheel into the rocks on the beach and people being turned over in the
wave which had to be 50ft high.
All hell broke lose but Kay Sira was still
holding. Barry was in the dinghy and making his way to the screams coming from
the beach. He pulled two small children out from all the rubbish in the water
and then he pulled their mum out. After a while he found the father who had a
bad cut to the head, he was floating amongst the rubbish. I cannot stress how
lucky these people were not to have lost their lives. All 8 people from the tour
boat were accounted for damaged but alive. Another wave came in and swamped the
people on the beach whilst they were trying to give first aid. Barry managed to
get all of them back to our friends boat where we bathed their wounds and tried
to calm them. Barry then went and moved our boat and picked me up and we got out
of there once we were happy we had helped where we could.
All the yachts
had held. We did not know what had happened or if another huge wave was on its
way. Gradually news filtered over the vhf radio what had happened and it made
us feel very vulnerable - we had cheated death again!
We did not know
where to go or which direction to take as we had heard that there were more earthquakes
and more tidal waves on the way. We stayed in deep water and just listened to
大象传媒 World service for more news. We were worried for our friends. Today we are
in Krabi which because of its high sea wall does not look too bad until you see
posters of missing persons including a little 3 year old girl missing - last seen
out at one of the very small islands off here'.
We have heard our lovely
comfortable safe marina is destroyed with many boats damaged or sunk and again
we could have easily have been there and lost the boat. No one was killed that
we know of and our plan is probably to make our way back there and help in the
rebuild if that's possible.
KO Lak a small Thai island further up in the
bay has had a 5 star resort wiped out with many deaths. Last year we were sailing
all around the affected islands with our family and friends - it is heart breaking
to see the devastation.
Yesterday we spoke to friends on the radio who
had been in Phi Phi Don when the waves hit - they were safe and went ashore to
help as they are both doctors and spent 36 hours non-stop treating some of the
appalling injuries. I don't know how many of our lives Barry and I have used up
but I have said I am really ready to go and live in Spain and grow vegetables!!!
Barry
& Lynette |
Date:
Thursday, December 9, 2004 | We
are living on our 42ft sailing ketch, Kay Sira in a small marina in the NW corner
of Langkawi in Malaysia. Our life at the moment consists of working on Kay Sira
to prepare her for the coming sailing season here in SE Asia and trying to get
all our xmas cards posted in time!!! It is hard to feel Christmassy when it is
30+degrees!!!!!!!!!
We arrived in SE Asia in October last year. We sailed
up from Townsville in Queensland Australia. Our voyage took us up the coast of
Australia inside the great barrier reef following the route Capt Cook took all
those years ago. Nothing much has changed since then and it is still a very deserted
coastline with more Crocs (salties) than people, so we did not do much swimming!!
We visited Cooktown, Thursday Island, Gove and Darwin, then headed out into the
Indian Ocean.
After five days at sea we found ourselves near Ashmore Reef
a deserted coral atol. We decided to stop for a look and ended up staying a week
we liked it so much. We then sailed to Komodo Island in Indonesia, home of the
famous Monitor Lizards up to 6ft long!! Then on to Singapore and up the Malacca
straights to Langkawi.
Barry
& Lynette |
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