|
VarleyNews © 2010 by John Varley; all rights reserved |
|
Our Second Earthquake
About seven
years ago we were parked in an RV at Pismo Beach when a
6.6 earthquake struck the area, centered very close to
San Simeon, about 60 miles north of us. The RV shook and we
got outside and watched the trees swaying back and forth.
There was a crack in the road 100 yards away from us with a
gap of about 6 inches, and all the stock in the little
liquor store down the street was on the floor, broken and
stinking. To the north at Paso Robles a building collapsed
and killed two women. We were about 5 feet above the high
tide level so we jumped in the car with our laptops and
headed for higher ground, worried about a tsunami. Didn’t
happen.
Two days ago we
went to visit the Orange
Empire Railway Museum in Perris, where you can ride on
old LA streetcars and antique trains. After that we decided
to try our luck at the
Pechanga Indian casino in Temecula, which is about
halfway between LA and San Diego on the inland route. (We
lost $60 at video poker, which is about our limit.) We
pulled out of the parking structure and were waiting at a
red light when the car began to rock gently. No big thing.
We thought it might be the wind at first, as it was a windy
day. We drove on, and a few miles down the road we were
stopped again and a homeless guy came down the line holding
out a Starbucks cup and a sign (ANYTHING HELPS GOD BLESS).
“Did you feel that quake?” he asked. I’m pretty sure that if
we’d been moving in the car when it hit, we wouldn’t have
felt a thing.
You know, it’s
hard to find much radio news these days, at least where we
were. There used to be 24/7 news stations on AM. We couldn’t
find anything until we got to
K-EARTH 101 oldies
(well, ‘60s are oldies now, aren’t we?) The DJ came on
between “Wild
Thing” and “Do
You Know the Way to San Jose?” and said there
had been a very large earthquake, 6.9, centered near
Mexicali.
That was about 100 miles southeast of Temecula. And that was
about all we learned until we got home, 200 miles from the
quake. Later, they revised it up to 7.2, which is very
large.
They said people
felt it in LA, and yesterday at the
Grand Central
Market downtown the man who sold us hot dogs said the
light fixtures swayed. He also said he wished he was back in
Boston. I’ve observed that some people have a real horror of
earthquakes. Many of them don’t even like to visit
California for that reason. (Did you know that the biggest
quake non-Indians have ever experienced in North America was
in … Missouri? It’s a fact.)
April 8, 2010 Hollywood, CA |