'SOS' spotted on Tanjung Bungah beach, but no trouble in sight


Photo by CHAN BOON KAI

GEORGE TOWN: Someone on the beach in Tanjung Bungah clearly had too much time and many pieces of driftwood.

While photographing the coastline with a drone recently, The Star photographer Chan Boon Kai caught sight of a large “SOS” sign laid out on the sand.

It must have taken a bit of arranging because the letters were several metres across and visible from about 120m in the air.

Chan spotted the "distress signal" only after returning to the office and reviewing the drone pictures. The lower parts of the letters seemed to have already been washed away by the high tide.

But there was no marooned sailor or lost hiker waiting to be saved in this populated corner of Penang with a food court across the road.

Someone obviously decided to re-enact a scene from all deserted island movies, arranging driftwood into the universal cry for help.

The SOS signal is over a century old and first became official in 1908 when ships began using radio telegraphy.

At first, the three letters did not mean anything; it was just because the simple dot-dot-dot dash-dash-dash dot-dot-dot pattern was easy to tap out in Morse code and easy to recognise in a hurry.

Only much later did it become popularly linked to the phrase “Save Our Souls”.

Since then, “SOS” has appeared everywhere from wartime bunkers to scout camps and even in Tanjung Bungah, apparently.

If nothing else, this particular SOS shows that someone enjoyed playing make-believe at the beach.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
Tnajung Bungah , Penang , SOS , High Tide , Drone

Next In Nation

Ipoh man arrested after running amok with samurai sword, hurting family
Chronology of the 1MDB case involving Najib
1MDB verdict: Najib to file appeal on Monday following verdict, says lead counsel Shafee
1MDB verdict: Najib admits to feeling 'alone' in struggle for freedom
Terengganu hit by third wave flood
1MDB verdict: Najib gets 15 years' jail plus RM11.4bil fine
1MDB verdict: Prosecution calls for maximum 20-year jail sentence, RM11.4bil fine
Over 300,000 summonses issued during traffic law compliance op since Oct, says KL top cop
Two-year-old girl killed, seven others hurt in Terengganu road crash
Eight nabbed during Kampung Sungai Baru incident to be charged, say police

Others Also Read