PeterRS Posted yesterday at 07:37 AM Posted yesterday at 07:37 AM Reports indicate that the south of the country has been hit by its worst rainfall in 300 years. Ten Provinces have been hit with the city of Hat Yai being the worst. It experienced 335 mm in a single day. Desperate residents are perched on rooftops. More than 2 million peope have been affected. Military ships including an aircraft carrier with supplies, a flotilla of boats and rescue helicopters have been mobiised to help residents. 33 have aleady died. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg97wx144jo Hat Yai: photo Weerapong Narongkul Bangkok Post Ruthrieston, Vessey, FunFifties and 3 others 6 Quote
Keithambrose Posted yesterday at 10:29 AM Posted yesterday at 10:29 AM 2 hours ago, PeterRS said: Reports indicate that the south of the country has been hit by its worst rainfall in 300 years. Ten Provinces have been hit with the city of Hat Yai being the worst. It experienced 335 mm in a single day. Desperate residents are perched on rooftops. More than 2 million peope have been affected. Military ships including an aircraft carrier with supplies, a flotilla of boats and rescue helicopters have been mobiised to help residents. 33 have aleady died. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg97wx144jo Hat Yai: photo Weerapong Narongkul Bangkok Post I took off from Suvarnabhumi on Monday, and after about 5 mins, all you could see was flooding everywhere, it went on for many miles, roads disappeared, isolated patches of high ground. Odd houses, otherwise just water. mauRICE 1 Quote
llz Posted yesterday at 11:10 AM Posted yesterday at 11:10 AM Five minutes after taking off from Suwannaphum, you were not flying above Hat Yai for sure. What you saw was the Central plains where the situation on the ground is now much less critical than it seems when looking from above. mauRICE 1 Quote
PeterRS Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago 3 hours ago, Keithambrose said: I took off from Suvarnabhumi on Monday, and after about 5 mins, all you could see was flooding everywhere, it went on for many miles, roads disappeared, isolated patches of high ground. Odd houses, otherwise just water. Agree with @llz. Unless you were flying due south for at least 30 minutes, it would have been impossible to see the flooding in the south. To the north of Bangkok there is a much lesser degree of flooding after the Chao Phraya dischage rate was increased. Even though that took place three months ago, some parts of Ayutthaya Province remain under some water. Quote
khaolakguy Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago Truly dreadful floods in the south. The video gives a sense of the scale. https://youtu.be/9UiqmID9dxM PeterRS, Ruthrieston and mauRICE 1 2 Quote
mauRICE Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago These photos were taken by friends who live or are on holiday in Hatyai. My family home and farm are only a two-hour drive away but we're on high ground. The flooding has been going on for five consecutive days affecting 690,000 people in Hatyai alone but Anutin only woke up to the magnitude of this disaster yesterday. Meanwhile, volunteer rescue missions from Malaysia and Singapore have been going in since last Sunday. The upcoming SEA Games events that have been scheduled in Songkhla will likely be relocated to Bangkok and Chonburi. Here's a sample of the kind of messages I've been receiving from friends stranded there. The last bit reads like an excerpt from Anne Frank. 23.28 น. ตอนนี้ก็ยังนั่งอยู่ที่บ้าน รอเรืออพยพ พร้อมๆกับเพื่อนบ้านทั้งซอย11/1และซ.12ที่รอคอยกันอย่างมีความหวังว่ามีเรือมาช่วย โดยเฉพาะซ.12 ที่แม้กระทั่งเสียงเป่านกหวีดขอความช่วยเหลือยังดังแบบระโหยโรยแรง คนเป่าคงหมดแรง ตอนนี้ทุกคนในซอยไม่มีใครกล้านอนสักคน คอยเงี่ยหูฟังเสียงเรือกันทุกบ้าน สลับกันตื่นมาสอดส่อง ตอนนี้ระดับน้ำอยู่ที่ขั้นบันไดเหลืออีก5ขั้นจะขึ้นถึงชั้น2 ยังรอคอยกันต่อไป 11:28 PM. I'm still sitting at home, waiting for the evacuation boat, along with neighbors in both Soi 11/1 and Soi 12, who are all waiting with hope for a boat to arrive. In Soi 12, especially, even the whistle for help is becoming faint. The whistler must be exhausted. No one in the alley dares to sleep. Everyone is listening carefully for the boat's sound, taking turns waking up to keep an eye out. The water level is now at the top of the stairs, with five steps left to reach the second floor. We're still waiting. PeterRS and vinapu 1 1 Quote
PeterRS Posted 11 hours ago Author Posted 11 hours ago 7 hours ago, khaolakguy said: Truly dreadful floods in the south. The video gives a sense of the scale. https://youtu.be/9UiqmID9dxM That vdo is absolutely horrible. My heart goes out to all whose homes have been flooded and familes who have lost loved ones. I have a Thai friend whose home was flooded for 3 months during the massive flooding in parts of Bangkok in 2011. It took weeks afterwards to render his ground floor habitable again. 13.6 million people were affected by those floods. Ruthrieston 1 Quote
jimmie50 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago So terrible. Cannot believe this is the second year in a row they have had to endure such horrible conditions. Devastating. mauRICE 1 Quote
floridarob Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago A few degrees of warming doesn’t sound like much, but in the ocean it’s catastrophic — warmer water holds less oxygen, fuels massive algal blooms, and creates over 500 growing ‘dead zones’ where nothing can survive. Oceans absorb 90% of the excess heat we create, and even a 1–2°C rise collapses ecosystems. The Earth will eventually adapt and reset, but humans won’t. The planet isn’t dying — we are 🥺 mauRICE 1 Quote
mauRICE Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 21 minutes ago, floridarob said: The planet isn’t dying — we are 🥺 But thanks to Pattaya, the dead live again! Quote