Written by Giostanovlatto. Founder Hey Bali Observer of Tourism
There is no drama in the video.
No alarms. No raised voices. No sense of danger.
Just a boat, a fading sunset, and a family standing on an open deck as thousands of fruit bats sweep across the sky.
Recorded in the early evening of 26 December 2025 near Kalong Island in Komodo National Park, the footage captures what would later become the last ordinary moment before the tourist vessel Putri Sakinah disappeared into tragedy.
The scene is deceptively simple. Children stand near the railing. An adult woman stays close, watchful but calm. Above them, the sky fills with motion as bats leave the mangroves, a daily ritual that has long drawn visitors to these waters. For tourists, it is a moment of wonder. For locals, it is a familiar marker of time.
Nothing in the frame suggests that this family is standing at the edge of history.
This is what makes the video so arresting. It does not document disaster. It documents life continuing as planned.
The boat lifts anchor and begins its slow departure toward Padar Island, following a route taken countless times before. The sea, at least on camera, appears cooperative. The light is soft. The atmosphere is unremarkable. It is the kind of scene that would usually be forgotten by nightfall.
Instead, it has become a record of what was lost.
The power of the footage lies in its ordinariness. There is no spectacle, only routine. And in that routine, the humanity of the passengers becomes painfully clear. These are not figures in a breaking news alert. They are children watching the sky. A mother keeping them close. A family finishing a holiday moment together.
Hours later, the same sea would tell a different story.
Maritime tragedies are often remembered for the chaos they create, the rescue operations, the unanswered questions. This video offers none of that. What it preserves is quieter and, in many ways, harder to bear: the calm before knowledge arrives, before fear has a reason to exist.
For investigators, the footage helps establish a timeline. For the public, it does something else entirely. It collapses the emotional distance between “tourist accident” and personal loss.
In places like Komodo, where natural beauty and natural risk coexist, the line between safety and danger is not always visible. The west monsoon season does not announce itself with sirens. It arrives gradually, often after sunset, beyond sheltered islands and beyond the reach of casual observation.
That reality is absent from the video. And that absence is the point.
The last ordinary moment is rarely recognized as such when it happens. Only afterward does it gain meaning, transformed by what follows.
This footage does not show a tragedy unfolding. It shows a family still whole, a journey still routine, and a world that has not yet changed.
Sometimes, the most devastating images are the ones where nothing seems wrong at all.
A Note on Context & Respect
In Bali and across the Indonesian archipelago, the sea commands a profound cultural respect, acknowledged in traditions like Segara Kerthi, the ritual purification of the ocean. This footage, in its heartbreaking simplicity, mirrors that ancient understanding of the sea’s dual nature: a source of life and passage, yet an environment that demands humility.
For media and for us as an audience, a duty follows this understanding. This digital artifact is not a spectacle but a sacred, painful fragment of a story that belongs, first and foremost, to a grieving family. We can acknowledge the universal loss it represents, but we must also uphold their request for privacy. Our focus should turn to the living—to the ongoing search, to the resilience of survivors, and to the critical questions of maritime safety that ensure such an “ordinary moment” is not the last of its kind.
— Giostanovlatto, Hey Bali News
Amateur video recorded around 6.30pm shows the tourist boat Putri Sakinah calmly leaving Kalong Island, about two hours before the deadly Komodo incident. https://t.co/al5ppKSZ91#Komodo #LabuanBajo #PutriSakinah #KomodoNationalPark #MaritimeSafety #VALENCIA #BreakingVideo pic.twitter.com/YCaHick4IY
— Hey Bali (@Heybaliinfo) December 30, 2025














































