OT Have you guys seen this - fascinating

"Andy" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

"Janet Bostwick" wrote:

sco


Janet,

He certainly kept his cool composure throughout.

Probably part of a news camerman's job description. DON'T PANIC!

Best,

Andy

Janet says to Andy:
You're probably too much of a young whipper-snapper to remember. But in the
old days, the Sunday funnies carried Smilin' Jack? I have never forgotten
the time when the bad guy and Jack were fighting on a mountain side and an
earthquake opened a large crevasse. The bad guy fell in and the earth
closed. After seeing the cracks in the earth from Mother Earth's latest
rampage, I wonder at the power. It seems to me we are all fleas walking on
the back of a large sleeping dog. If and when he gets up and gives a shake,
we are in trouble.
Janet
 
"Janet Bostwick" wrote:



Janet,

Right. The world is not as solid as we'd like to think it is.

For my first quake, the furniture began to vibrate across the floors
combined with the sound of nails in the walls, pulling out of wood
beams. An awful sound!!!

I looked up at the ceiling thinking it was the above neighbors having
rough sex! LOL!!!

Mother Nature, ever the evil jokester!

Best,

Andy
 
"Andy" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

"Janet Bostwick" wrote:



Janet,

Right. The world is not as solid as we'd like to think it is.

For my first quake, the furniture began to vibrate across the floors
combined with the sound of nails in the walls, pulling out of wood
beams. An awful sound!!!

I looked up at the ceiling thinking it was the above neighbors having
rough sex! LOL!!!

Mother Nature, ever the evil jokester!

Best,

Andy
Janet says to Andy:
For my first quake, (we don't get many of notice here) I was getting ready
for work. I thought that the furnace was about to blow and the air ducts
were buckling. When I realized what was happening, the next thing I knew, I
was standing outside in my driveway, nude, wrapped in the bedspread. I knew
all about standing in stronger doorways and all that, but my brain didn't
have a chance to tell my body what to do. I just skedaddled. Fortunately,
everyone else in the court had already left for work and I didn't have to
'duck and cover.' ;o}
Janet
 
Re: [email protected]

Janet Bostwick wrote:


He's standing on liquefying earth. One more decimal point on the Richter
scale and you probably never see that video. Scary stuff!

One of the networks has been airing a program showing the still-visible
remains of sand and water geysers which spontaneously erupted from huge
fissures during the New Madrid Fault earthquake in the early 1800s as the
whole epicenter area underwent liquefaction. The "Smilin' Jack": scenario
you described to Andy in another post actually took place there on a very
large scale.

That video makes you wonder just how close they came in Japan to having the
ground literally swallow people up. That vid was shot in an are the
videographer said was reclaimed by filling in harbor space so if it
happened, an area like that would probably be the first to go. We are just
gnats on mammoths.
 
"Janet Bostwick" wrote:



Janet,

I've been called that before!!! By a drunk American Indian friend.

Oren! A head Indian chief. We loved and guarded him very carefully.

Best,

Andy
 
On Mon, 14 Mar 2011 16:00:56 -0600, "Janet Bostwick"
wrote:


In the last big earthquake in Hawaii- a 6.8 or something several years
ago, I puzzled over the standing in a doorway because the one I was in
was creaking, so I ran outside. Later the press reminded us that one
should not stand in a doorway and outside was best or under a large
piece of furniture/table. Wonder where our brains got that "stand in
a door way"?

aloha,
Cea
 
pure kona wrote:

A doorway without a door is one of the best supported points inside a
house and probably far enough from furniture so nothing will be falling
on you from above. There is a big caveat - If the quake is not so
strong that it will hurl you out of the doorway.

A doorway with a door has a large plate that will swing into you and
push you towards the most dangerous place in the house.

If the quake is big enough, duck and cover whereever you are. One large
quake happened while I was in the shower. Nowhere to go in there but
down into the tub, roll up, cover and hope the shower stall didn't fall
in on me.

The problem with running outside - You arrive at the edge of the
building at exactly the same time that stuff starts tumbling off the
roof. It is a strategy specifically designed to increase the chance of
injury or death. Definitely the wrong thing to do during an earthquake.

If there might be a tsunami following the quake where to be changes
dramatically.
 
On Tue, 15 Mar 2011 01:39:47 -0500, "Nunya Bidnits"
wrote:

Did you see where Christchurch (the city proper) is going to have to
abandon a large portion of the damaged city forever because the
liquifaction was so great the land has been damaged beyond repair?
Janet
 
On Tue, 15 Mar 2011 06:11:20 -1000, pure kona
wrote:


Wasn't that part of the "tornado drill" back East? I imagine it went
West with us as we moved.


--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Tue, 15 Mar 2011 06:11:20 -1000, pure kona
wrote:

snip

I just heard the doorway thing within the last week. I can't remember
where I heard it. As a matter of fact, it was something like stand in
a doorway or in a corner of the room. It would have to have been
associated with the earthquake in Japan.
Janet
 
Re: [email protected]

Janet Bostwick wrote:


No I hadn't seen that but I can understand why that would be the case.

These disasters are cycling around the "Ring of Fire" or Pacific Rim
earthquake zone. Is this a pattern and is the US west coast next? There
seems to be a lot of speculation to that effect.

If I lived in Vancouver, Portland or Seattle I'd probably be planning my
exit inland right about now.

MartyB
 
"Nunya Bidnits" wrote:



A tornado swept by my house. Horizontal rain. No time to react. I just
thought "whoa!"

It touched down about 1/4 mile away. A day or so later we drove past the
destruction out of curiosity. Stuff like that doesn't happen in
Pennsylvania too often.

Tree damage. No loss of life.

Andy
 
On Tue, 15 Mar 2011 14:24:14 -0500, Andy wrote:


Glad to hear that! It certainly could have been worse.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Mar 15, 11:54?am, "Nunya Bidnits" wrote:

Yes, we are...My husband and I commute from Gig Harbor to Seattle,
going over the Narrows Bridge twice a day. If we have an earthquake,
we could be stranded! Yesterday as we were driving through Fife, we
were imagining what kind of mess a tsunami would cause through there,
with Mt. Rainier erupting in the distance, caused by the earthquake.
It would be a truly fucked situation!
 
On Tue, 15 Mar 2011 16:58:13 +0000 (UTC), Doug Freyburger
wrote:


If you go here: http://smithfarms.com/smile2.htm (excuse the page
name, it was an easy spot) --- I have pasted the Earthquake Safety
Tips that was sent to Hawaii residents after the 6.8 earthquake in
Hawaii in October of 2009.

FWIW

aloha,
Cea
 
pure kona wrote:



Aloha!

Sorry I started the Mount Kilaueala eruption. I stole black sand at the
south black sand beach on Hawaii, after being warned not to, back in
1983.

We flew out a day or two later as it was erupting.

It's all my fault. Pele. Have mercy and stop, please!

I still have the little Bacardi rum airplane bottle full of black sand
lava.

\ooo/

Hang loose, Pele!

Best,

Andy
 
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