Cwalker935
Member
We had a 2.3 magnitude earthquake last night, the epicenter was about 3 miles from my house. Seemed like loud rolling thunder. My wife thought I had gas.
My wife thought I had gas.
We had a 2.3 magnitude earthquake last night, the epicenter was about 3 miles from my house. Seemed like loud rolling thunder. My wife thought I had gas.
I was laying in a waterbed in Fairbanks, Alaska back in 2002 ... felt a 9.2 and watched the ceiling swaying at least a foot back and forth for a good 20 seconds. I barely felt a thing till I started to think I was seeing things and reached for the bed rail ...
I was laying in a waterbed in Fairbanks, Alaska back in 2002 ... felt a 9.2 and watched the ceiling swaying at least a foot back and forth for a good 20 seconds. I barely felt a thing till I started to think I was seeing things and reached for the bed rail ...
I was laying in a waterbed in Fairbanks, Alaska back in 2002 ... felt a 9.2 and watched the ceiling swaying at least a foot back and forth for a good 20 seconds. I barely felt a thing till I started to think I was seeing things and reached for the bed rail ...
I was laying in a waterbed in Fairbanks, Alaska back in 2002 ... felt a 9.2 and watched the ceiling swaying at least a foot back and forth for a good 20 seconds. I barely felt a thing till I started to think I was seeing things and reached for the bed rail ...
What the heck were you doing in Alaska??:cat:
I was laying in a waterbed in Fairbanks, Alaska back in 2002 ... felt a 9.2 and watched the ceiling swaying at least a foot back and forth for a good 20 seconds. I barely felt a thing till I started to think I was seeing things and reached for the bed rail ...
Was that correct or typo? I remember the 1964? quake in Alaska, and reading about the one in the '50s that caused a dormant volcano to erupt. But I was unaware of a 9.2 in Alaska in 2002. In December of 2004, there was the quake/tsunami of 9+ in the Indonesia area, and the 9+ in March of 2011. We had just left Japan three months before it struck.
I lived about 20 miles, as the crow flies, from the epicenter of the January 17, 1995 Hanshin quake in Kobe, Japan, a 7.2 that killed 6000. That was more than enough shaking for me.
I was in San Diego when the 6.7 quake hit LA in 94. We had come back to the motel late and transferred some computer equipment from the back of the truck to the trailer we had left in the parking lot. That close to the border, I joked with my husband that the police would probably come knocking on the door to see what we were doing out there in the middle of the night.
We were sound asleep when the door started a loud banging. My husband thought it WAS the police banging on the door!
Having lived in Hollister, CA right on the big fault line, my half-awake brain diagnosed "earthquake" and "not bad" (in San Diego, at least) and I rolled over and said "It's OK dear, it's just an earthquake. Go back to sleep." He was rigid for the rest of the night! He won't let me live that one down for a while!