Earthquake this morning -- WooHoo!
Posted: Fri Jul 16, 2010 10:48 am
We got a 3.6 Earthquake this morning just about 45 minutes ago 
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Not too far from where I grew up.
You pretty much "can" have them everywhere in the USA. Although this is the largest one I have experienced on the East Coast, I have experienced several smaller ones in Maryland & Virginia and one in Florida. I went through a couple of larger ones in California during the 18 months I lived there. Throw in the hurricanes and tornadoes we get on the east coast and we pretty much get the same stuff other parts of the country gets.Rook Zimbabwe wrote:They got Earthquakes in MD???
Those were always fun in Cocoa Beach, FL ! I remember an earthquake or two in the 80s early 90s in SE Pennsylvania also !Kuron wrote:I do miss the old days of hurricanes in Florida. ... I can't interest anybody in a hurricane party.
Not me!Kuron wrote:I do miss the old days of hurricanes in Florida.
I moved to Florida right before Elena. Elena never hit land in Florida, it just kissed Florida. The storm surge and flooding did minimal damage. It was interesting seeing the flooding in Tampa and literally seeing the USS Requin floating upside down. I can remember some of the damage along the Courtney Campbell Causeway (around the Ben T Davis Beach area) still had not been cleaned up 7 1/2 years later when I moved from Florida. But since it was only big chunks of broken concrete sitting off the side of the road that had been drug up from the beach area, it was not a major issue.GWarner wrote:I remember hurricane Elena back in '85 it was my first real hurricane threat
No, not hoping for one. But since you can't change what is going to happen, you might as well experience it.IMO anyone that hopes for a direct hit where they are is just plain stupid, its about the same as hoping a tornado comes along and destroys your home.
More like hoping your belongings are still there since you are abandoning your home and leaving it unprotected from looters.I was ordered to evacuate my home four times so I can tell there's nothing so unsettling as leaving your home not knowing if it will still be there when you return.
I was speaking about the hurricane party - NOT the hurricane itself. I lived in FL 2004-2008 when the BIG ones hit.Mohawk70 wrote:Those were always fun in Cocoa Beach, FL ! I remember an earthquake or two in the 80s early 90s in SE Pennsylvania also !Kuron wrote:I do miss the old days of hurricanes in Florida. ... I can't interest anybody in a hurricane party.
True but that kiss lasted 12 hours as the storm just sat 50 miles off the coast and pounded us with winds and rain enough to do over a billion dollars in damage. The worst part was nobody, not even the meteorologists had any idea which way the storm would would go when it started moving again.Kuron wrote:I moved to Florida right before Elena. Elena never hit land in Florida, it just kissed Florida.
I can understand that but only to a point. If the storm was only a category 1 or 2 and I was on high ground so I didn't have to worry about the storm surge, which is what causes the most deaths in a hurricane, then yeah, I might stick around to experience it. But if the storm is a category 3 or higher or I'm in a low lying area where the storm surge or flooding is a real threat, I'll leave and go someplace a lot safer to wait out the storm.Kuron wrote:No, not hoping for one. But since you can't change what is going to happen, you might as well experience it.
Not really, looters generally target stores where the pickings are easier to come by, breaking into a home has no guarantee of them finding anything they can turn into cash. A looter would have to be pretty desperate and likely not interested in cash to start looting homes and you'd likely only see that in devastated area and in that situation they'll be looking for things to help them survive, like food, water, etc.Kuron wrote:More like hoping your belongings are still there since you are abandoning your home and leaving it unprotected from looters.
It is important to keep that number in perspective. After Elena, it came out that much of the roof damage was done because several builders were not securing the roofs to the homes properly in the subdivisions they were putting up.pounded us with winds and rain enough to do over a billion dollars in damage.
They never do. I remember one hurricane during the time I lived in Florida that went back and forth a couple of times in the Gulf before it decided which direction it was going to finally go in.The worst part was nobody, not even the meteorologists had any idea which way the storm would would go when it started moving again.
Katrina was a textbook definition of a CF. Evacuate people into stadiums so your wives and daughters can be raped, and people in general can be harmed by falling debris from a structure that was never designed to deal with those types of sustained winds, or evacuate people that should not have been evacuated and clog the highways. In Katrina, the storm did little actual damage, the devastation came from the flooding because of levees that had been improperly maintained. Generally, the worst thing you can do in any natural or man-made disaster is listen to the government.I have lived in Houston for 99% of my life so I have had all the Hurricanes we had here... no so bad... Not even Katrina/Rita or Ike (though we were without power and water from Ike for 2 weeks!)
Better you than me. I would have put a bullet through his head without a second thought. I have a buddy in the 101st Airborne that would love to do the same.Then I got stuck with what we called Geraldo duty... Making sure Geraldo Rivera did not make an ASS out of himssef on national TV