Krakatau, a killer volcano near Java

Mark Levitin | Live the World

November 23, 2022

Few topographic objects have drawn as much attention in human history as Krakatau volcano. The cone rising out of the **sea **between **Java **and Sumatra looks humble, but it is, in fact, anything but. **Krakatau **is one of the most **active **volcanoes on Earth and a habitual killer. Its **eruption **in 1883 was a volume explosion four times more powerful than the mightiest nuke ever created. Just recently, in 2018, it collapsed, launching a tsunami wave that took hundreds of lives on nearby Java. While slightly risky, a visit to the **volcano **can be arranged, and with luck, this is one of the best chances you will ever get to see an explosive **eruption **and come back to tell the tale. If a night on a barren, shockwave-swept coast of Rakata, a nearby **island **and the usual viewpoint, takes too large a toll,  stop on Pulau Sebesi on the way back: a tropical islet with a fishing village, two guesthouses, lots of wild beach, and coral gardens beneath the **sea **surface.

© Mark Levitin

Explosive history

**Krakatau **made a name for itself in 1883, when it blew up with the explosive force of approximately 200 Mt - roughly 13000 more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. There goes the human hubris - "destroying our planet, saving our planet..." This planet is not ours, and it can take care of itself - and of us if we are unlucky. The blast created a tsunami wave that circled the globe; on nearby landmasses, tens of thousands were killed. Paradoxically, the actual explosion did not harm anyone - the **island **had been (and still is, for obvious reasons) uninhabited. Most of the cone was blasted away, with only three shards remaining above the water on the periphery. The vent ended up under the sea, but a new cone started growing from the bottom. By the late 20th century, the new cone, called Anak Krakatau - literally, Krakatau's child - was over 300 m tall and intermittently active. But there was no rest for the wicked - during one of its **eruptive **phases in 2018, Anak **Krakatau **imploded. Collapsing rocks again launched a tsunami that hit nearby Java, killing hundreds - including an entire popular rock band that was apparently about to perform in a beach resort. The cycle went on: water covered the crater again, causing curious and relatively safe steam eruptions, but a fresh cone rose quickly and **erupted **massively in 2020. At the moment, **Krakatau **is quiet by its own restless standards and can be visited. 

© Mark Levitin

Sebesi island

If a night of volcano-watching leaves you desperate for some R&R, consider a stop on Sebesi I**sland **on the way back. The **island **is tiny, just a fringe of sand surrounding another **volcano **(this one - dormant). A fishing village stands on the shore, with at least two local families letting out rooms - rather overpriced and very basic, but you would be paying for a piece of tropical paradise close to the capital. The **sea **is calm, since Java and Sumatra block waves on both sides, there is a fair bit of live coral and an even smaller uninhabited islet mostly made of **beach **within a short boat ride. There is not much to do out of the water, but this is the whole point, isn't it?

© Mark Levitin

Practicalities

Trips to **Krakatau **can be arranged from either Java or Sumatra. A few tour agencies in Jakarta are willing to take care of everything - for a price, clearly. To do it yourself, first get to Kalianda, a small Sumatran town facing Sunda strait, easily accessible by bus. Hiring a boat directly from there will still be rather expensive. The cheapest way would be to board the daily ferry (in fact, a single-deck wooden vessel carrying both passengers and cargo, mainly bananas) to Sebesi Island, then negotiate with the fishermen. To see the **volcano **at its best, spend the night near it - this means camping on one of the three shards of the former Big Krakatau. Usually, the best **views are from Rakata Island, **south of the main cone. This puts you less than 3 km from the **active **vent - if the **eruption **is strong enough, you will not even need a telephoto lens (if it blasts full force - ever again). If **Krakatau **is unusually peaceful, it may be possible to disembark on the **volcano **itself, and in some rare cases - even climb to the crater. Still, it is better to exercise extreme caution: **Krakatau **is a killer. Do not expect your boatman to be volcano-savvy - the fishermen of Sebesi do enjoy fishing next to the cone, where sulfuric gas makes fish slow and easy to scoop, but they commonly get pulverized every time **Krakatau **blows up. Trust your eyes, recall your physics, learn some volcanology, and just in case, leave a will.

 

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