So who else felt the earthquake at 4:30 am? We ain't used to that in these here parts. It was a doooozy.
So cool.
MJ said he felt it.
Just got an aftershock about 15 minutes ago. Wild.
QuoteJust got an aftershock about 15 minutes ago. Wild.
Yeah, we just felt the aftershock at 11:14 here at work. The bigger one hit at 5:30 this morning in Louisville. Crazy!!
QuoteQuoteJust got an aftershock about 15 minutes ago. Wild.
Yeah, we just felt the aftershock at 11:14 here at work. The bigger one hit at 5:30 this morning in Louisville. Crazy!!
Is Louisville on East Coast time? Or do you just not do daylight savings time?
We get them all the time & every time we do I shit myself. & then when it's done we always call my wife's folks regardless of what the time is, as a few miles can make all the difference...
Everyone here is 'waiting' for the next Kobe. There's nothing 'cool' about earthquakes IMO :-/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Hanshin_earthquake
Yeah, I felt it around 4-4:15 am. I kinda was thrown (or maybe I jumped) out of bed and proceeded to have a panic attack.
Yeah felt the after shock. It's not a good thing when you are near the top of an 18 story building that wasn't really designed with earthquakes in mind. I need a fucking smoke and drink really bad right now. Or maybe a good sedative.
QuoteIs Louisville on East Coast time? Or do you just not do daylight savings time?
They are on ET. I think it was only Arizona that isn't observing DST.
Quote
They are on ET. I think it was only Arizona that isn't observing DST.
Damn, you would have thought I would have figured that out by now. :-/
db, I am sure glad we don't have to deal with this all the time in the midwest. However, we did have one of the worst US earth quakes of all time in 1812. Estimated at 8.0!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Madrid_Earthquake
Quotedb, I am sure glad we don't have to deal with this all the time in the midwest. However, we did have one of the worst US earth quakes of all time in 1812. Estimated at 8.0!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Madrid_Earthquake
Earthquakes regardless of where they hit, how strong they are & however many fatalities there are, like I said,are a horrible, horrible thing.
I've posted a couple of times in the complaints thread after earthquakes & no one's said a word in response.
& yet here I interrupted a couple of posts here as if people thought it was a 'cool' or 'fun' thing to have experienced? Maybe I was wrong...apologies if I misunderstood those posts.
Well, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
Mother Nature is bad mother fucker.
i sure could use a vacation from this bull shit three ring circus sideshow.
learn to swim, learn to swim, learn to swim...
I don't know about anyone else, I know I'm not having fun. I know my BP is through the roof today and I'm twitchy right now.
Quote
i sure could use a vacation from this bull shit three ring circus sideshow.
learn to swim, learn to swim, learn to swim...
Ha! I just threw on a little TOOL during lunch today.
wow, I live in Boston but I was born and breed in the 'ville. I got a voicemessage from my mom this morning that was basically, "Hey, it's mom, hope you're good. Me and your dad miss you. We had an earthquake this morning, but everyone's okay. Have fun at work!"
I was like, DO WHAT?!
Hope you all are okay with no damage to your property an' persons.
QuoteMother Nature is bad mother fucker.
i sure could use a vacation from this bull shit three ring circus sideshow.
learn to swim, learn to swim, learn to swim...
Yeah you're quite right. Serves us right for all the shit we've given her :'(
P.S. Cheers Jon, I
knew I knew that line but couldn't figure it out for the life of me!.
I'm in northern Illinois and it woke me up about 4:30, it was the 1st time felt the earth move, it was very minimal, my cats were going bat shit crazy.
QuoteI don't know about anyone else, I know I'm not having fun. I know my BP is through the roof today and I'm twitchy right now.
Dude, seriously. It lasted 20 seconds and nothing happened. It wasn't that bad.
QuoteMother Nature is bad mother fucker.
I think this is a video of Neil's grandchildren of something:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJp6NEhTiuQ ;)
QuoteQuoteI don't know about anyone else, I know I'm not having fun. I know my BP is through the roof today and I'm twitchy right now.
Dude, seriously. It lasted 20 seconds and nothing happened. It wasn't that bad.
No, dude, why are you always on the attack? Earthquakes are wacky and they can be totally destructive on one side of the street while on the other nothing much happens. YOU may have felt nothing but don't assume somebody elses fear isn't justified. Earthquakes are nothing to be laissez-fair about.
QuoteQuoteI don't know about anyone else, I know I'm not having fun. I know my BP is through the roof today and I'm twitchy right now.
Dude, seriously. It lasted 20 seconds and nothing happened. It wasn't that bad.
Shit, 20 seconds is a long time! The last big one we had here lasted that long & killed 5000 + people (& cost about $200 billion)
QuoteQuoteI don't know about anyone else, I know I'm not having fun. I know my BP is through the roof today and I'm twitchy right now.
Dude, seriously. It lasted 20 seconds and nothing happened. It wasn't that bad.
Whatever.
It was a lot longer here in downtown St Louis then 20 seconds for the aftershock. The quake itself lasted a while too, several minutes.
After my 'there's nothing cool about earthquakes!' post (which is still true!) it would be pretty silly & shallow of me to even suggest that todays earthquake had anything to do with the release of Evil Urges but c'mon, we're all thinking it right?
First the storm @ Bonnaroo & now this?!! ;)
QuoteAfter my 'there's nothing cool about earthquakes!' post (which is still true!) it would be pretty silly & shallow of me to even suggest that todays earthquake had anything to do with the release of Evil Urges but c'mon, we're all thinking it right?
First the storm @ Bonnaroo & now this?!! ;)
Mother Nature digs MMJ! She turned the bass up on her stereo a bit too loud! ;D
QuoteWell, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
Mother Nature is bad mother fucker.
i sure could use a vacation from this bull shit three ring circus sideshow.
learn to swim, learn to swim, learn to swim...
As someone who has experienced more hurricanes than I care to mention (I had waves lapping up against my house twice in 2004), there is something fascinating about hurricanes - maybe not cool. The long anticipation and the panicky weather people with their "Vortex", "Titan", and "Nostradamus" prediction computers make for hours of good theater.
The sky turning kelly green is kind of cool. No power for 2 weeks in the middle of summer in Florida - not cool.
There is no season for Earthquakes, but our special hurricane season commences June 1. Our names this year:
Arthur
Bertha
Cristobal
Dolly
Edouard
Fay
Gustav
Hanna
Ike
Josephine
Kyle
Laura
Marco
Nana
Omar
Paloma
Rene
Sally
Teddy
Vicky
Wilfred
No Jim, Carl, Bo, Tommy, or Patrick. Paloma's a good one.
The first tremor woke me up at 5:37 and I thought I was having some kind of nightmare.
I couldn't believe how long it went on!!
I was at school at 11:30 when the second hit! All the HS kids were really excited. One kid told me he woke up at the 5:37 a.m. and was in shock at first and thought he had been "humping" his bed ;D That's a High School 17 year old for you!
I heard there may be 10 more days of aftershocks. Anyone else heard this?
QuoteWell, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
I'm glad
somebody knows where I'm coming from... I've never felt an earthquake before, only seen them in movies... the idea of the entire earth rumbling below us, and that "wave" being felt across the entire midwest is "cool" to me... but I'm a science dork, I guess.
I wouldn't have said "so cool" if there were fatalities, by the way... and come on, it happened on the same day of the Evil Urges sneak peak.
Everyone at work was talking about it...some say they felt it. I did not, though it may have woken me up. I woke up at around 4:30 when it supposedly happened, but don't remember actually "feeling" anything. I think the cat and dog did though, the cat was meowing more than usual and trying to wake us up. Kinda cool how animals are so perceptive to that stuff. I know what you're saying too Ewok, from a scientific standpoint, earthquakes are very interesting, and the level of devastation they can produce is just insane. My work is right next to some train tracks so I feel the earth move practically every day.
i was on my way to work when this went down. i thought i was having a seizure or something. it was odd.
The earthquake made Toronto news, plus it was also felt in parts of Toronto. Some Louisville street shots were on Breakfast TV here in Toronto.
QuoteQuoteWell, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
I'm glad somebody knows where I'm coming from... I've never felt an earthquake before, only seen them in movies... the idea of the entire earth rumbling below us, and that "wave" being felt across the entire midwest is "cool" to me... but I'm a science dork, I guess.
I wouldn't have said "so cool" if there were fatalities, by the way... and come on, it happened on the same day of the Evil Urges sneak peak.
Yeah sorry if I came over as a dick earlier.
We get them all the time here & they scare the shit out of me. For some strange reason they always seem to happen at night & you never know if it's going to be the next 'big one' (Japan is always talking, preparing, thinking about the next 'big one') Our house should be OK but I still lie there thinking 'is this the big one? should I get out of the house now?!!'
Japanese school kids practice for them all the time. I've only experienced one whilst teaching but the children got under the table faster than lightening!
Apologies again :)
QuoteQuoteQuoteWell, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
I'm glad somebody knows where I'm coming from... I've never felt an earthquake before, only seen them in movies... the idea of the entire earth rumbling below us, and that "wave" being felt across the entire midwest is "cool" to me... but I'm a science dork, I guess.
I wouldn't have said "so cool" if there were fatalities, by the way... and come on, it happened on the same day of the Evil Urges sneak peak.
Yeah sorry if I came over as a dick earlier.
We get them all the time here & they scare the shit out of me. For some strange reason they always seem to happen at night & you never know if it's going to be the next 'big one' (Japan is always talking, preparing, thinking about the next 'big one') Our house should be OK but I still lie there thinking 'is this the big one? should I get out of the house now?!!'
Japanese school kids practice for them all the time. I've only experienced one whilst teaching but the children got under the table faster than lightening!
Apologies again :)
Earthquakes are scary....
I live in Portland where we are constantly talking about the next big one here. Volcanoes and earthquakes all at once....very scary. But what is most frightening is with all the talk, very little funding comes through to upgrade our infrastructure or public buildings. My one solace is my lovely sister. She has her Phd in Geo-physics and her expertise is in subduction zones. This is at the forefront of research for predicting big quakes. She is a super smart cookie and may help us one day predict earthquakes (oh yeah, that is if the Federal Gov't decides that it is a good thing to fund science...but I digress).
The best advice she has given me is this:
1. Keep a good, solid pair of shoes next to your bed. If a big one hits and you have to evacuate quickly in the middle of the night you will be glad you did.
2. Don't put your bed under a window
Sounds simple but she really believes in these 2 tips....for what it is worth.
Sound advice Wiz, never thought about the bed under the window :)
Most of the new buildings & apartments here should be safe, fingers crossed. I think a lot of the people that died in Kobe were living in old, more traditional Japanese houses. There were also a lot of fires caused by electrical faults.
Yes, infrastructure is key to surviving an earthquake. Solid homes on solid ground with solid support. The Earth will always move, we just need to adapt to it.
QuoteQuoteWell, being that it was minor and nobody got hurt, it was kind of cool. In the same way a minor storm is cool, but a hurricane is not cool.
The best advice she has given me is this:
1. Keep a good, solid pair of shoes next to your bed. If a big one hits and you have to evacuate quickly in the middle of the night you will be glad you did.
2. Don't put your bed under a window
Sounds simple but she really believes in these 2 tips....for what it is worth.
Seriously. I have lived through many pretty sizable earthquakes. During the Whittier one (California), I think it was 1987 or '88, being thrown down the hallway, literally side to side, shoulder slamming each time into the wall, stumbling, wearing nothing but a t-shirt and trying to get out of the house only to find once I got there the entire neighborhood staring at my neekid self. Meanwhile, my neighoborhood slammed with houses falling to bits everywhere you looked.
During the Northridge quake I had just gotten into bed round about 4am when the big one hit (true far away from the epicenter, I was in Santa Monica = liquifaction city; yes, the one where the 10 fwy and many apartment houses collapsed not so far away from me). I remember my apartment neighbor, Dennis, shouting up to me "are you all right?". Yes, and he said "get out to the street". And so, blindly, as I was walking through my apartment to the door I heard him scream up again: "and put some shoes on". OH!, yes. Put shoes on. Best advice on the planet. So I did. Turns out, that time Old Mother Nature shut that town down pretty well for a good couple of days. People with no place to live, no power, no freeway, phones down. It was nuts. Also, don't light candles. It's a bad move. HAVE FLASHLIGHTS near your bed, as well as shoes. And when they start putting yellow tape around your dwelling, you better move QUICK LIKE to get your shit out, because you're not getting back into that place. Ever.
To this day I have emergency rations, flashlight, shoes, at the ready!