Pages:
1
2 |
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025
|
|
Cultist,
What I’m saying that you can’t parse is that the universe has no instruction manual. The best we can do today is often wrong or incomplete and not
the best we can do tomorrow. Anyone who takes the position that “the science is decided stop looking” is corrupting the very process by which we
learn and add to our knowledge.
This post is about Earthquakes! Do you have anything to say about earthquakes?
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025
|
|
The Loreto Earthquake swarm is back!
They started back up a couple of days ago low - mid 5s and high 4s. These are stronger than February's swarm.
|
|
Tioloco
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2653
Registered: 7-30-2014
Member Is Online
|
|
Have you felt any of them?
|
|
Almost
Junior Nomad
Posts: 29
Registered: 1-18-2022
Member Is Offline
|
|
The 5.6 on the 18th shook my house. We were outside having coffee and the whole place moved. The light strings were swinging around, our cups moved.
The 4.4 just after, we didn't really notice at all.
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025
|
|
No, we’re way down on the Pacific side south of Todos Santos.
|
|
pauldavidmena
Super Nomad
Posts: 1715
Registered: 5-23-2013
Location: Centerville, MA, USA
Member Is Offline
|
|
The Research Vessel Atlantis is somewhat north of Loreto, 27.47083 -111.48121, to be exact - just east of Isla Tortuga. They've been using both the
HOV Alvin and the AUV Sentry to study hydrothermal vents in the Sea of Cortez. I'm not sure if they've noted any seismic activity where they are, but
I can ask.
|
|
pacificobob
Super Nomad
Posts: 2306
Registered: 4-23-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
In 30 years living in Alaska i felt my share of seismic action.
I found comfort telling myself that smaller quakes were relieving stress on the plates and made the "big one" less likely.
|
|
AKgringo
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6025
Registered: 9-20-2014
Location: Anchorage, AK (no mas!)
Member Is Offline
Mood: Retireded
|
|
The largest earthquake I experienced in Anchorage was a magnitude 8. It was located in the Talkeetna range, pretty far from where I was so there was
no damage near me.
I was in a trailer I was using while re-constructing my house, and the subtle shaking went on so long that I began to think something was wrong with
me!
I was relieved when I stepped outside to see trees and power lines swaying with no breeze. It was a lot like taking a crap in a motorhome while
someone else was driving down the road!
If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space!
"Could do better if he tried!" Report card comments from most of my grade school teachers. Sadly, still true!
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025
|
|
The ‘94 Northridge EQ 6.7 was 2-3 miles north of our office. We were using a 45’ refer trailer as a video tape machine room. It hopped around for
about 40 sec or so and a 4’ block wall 40’ long next to it fell over.
Warner Bros had damage to several stages including the floor of a stage with a pit collapse.
The 2010 Mexicali EQ 7.1 lasted about 90 sec and south of San Felipe it was like jumping on a water mattress. Worst I was ever in!
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4913
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Offline
|
|
I was in Guatemala City for that one, too. We were sleeping in my van parked on the side of a little city park, luckily nothing close to us that could
fall on us. The van started rocking side to side like it was going to tip over. We could hear and see high rise buildings collapsing.
Estimated 23,000+ dead, 80,000 injured, 250,000 homes destroyed, 1.5 million left homeless.
|
|
surfhat
Senior Nomad
Posts: 545
Registered: 6-4-2012
Member Is Offline
|
|
Lencho, I was in Costa Rica when the Guatemala quake happened and sometime later my surf buddy and I met a couple and their best surf buddy from Santa
Cruz, Ca. while we were on the Caribbean side of Costa Rica.
They had many horror stories to tell while they helped others as much as they could at a large hospital and for as long as they could stand.
They were so grateful to be back on the beach and surfing again. Life had taught them quite a lesson about timing being everything.
It just so happened the beautiful blond girlfriend was the daughter of Otis Chandler, the publisher of the LA Times. Even he could not get much help
to them during the disaster. They put their time to good use helping others as much as they could for a month or so of volunteering.
They were great people to hang out with for a month, all the while the surf was pumping the whole time and gave us some of the best waves I have ever
surfed anywhere. A decade or so later, an offshore quake lifted the sea floor and the well-known break by that time was never what it was when we
discovered it on our own.
I had been passing through Guatemala heading south a month prior. Whew!
I may be confusing one trip south with another, but when I stayed in Guatemala City for a day or two, I found a movie theater showing the first Stars
Wars movie with English subtitles. Now that was a trip to the galaxies far, far away and in Espanol no less.
I have long lost touch with these fellow traveling surfers, and dare I say, humanitarians, but the good times and great waves we shared have always
remained as clear as if it happened yesterday.
Now back to the quakes in the Sea of Cortez.
|
|
pacificobob
Super Nomad
Posts: 2306
Registered: 4-23-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by lencho |
My worst was 1976, Guatemala City, 7.5.
The gods were on my side, I guess; a lot of people died in that one.
I left Guatamala city hours before that event on a PanAm flight to LAX. It was several years before I returned. The amount of rumble, destruction and
PTSD is something I'll never forget.
|
[Edited on 4-22-2024 by pacificobob]
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025
|
|
More Earthquakes off Bay of LA!
This is the current map! Anybody feel anything?
|
|
surfhat
Senior Nomad
Posts: 545
Registered: 6-4-2012
Member Is Offline
|
|
Is calling others a cultist necessary to make your point?
We all have our own perspectives that we each choose to follow for own own reasons. Right or left, right or wrong. haha
Baja Nomad from my perspective is a daily relief from all the crap we are exposed to daily.
My hope is that this simple priority will be others priority too. I can dream, and will, being the pollyanna idealist I guess I have become.
If that supposition is worthy of being criticized, I will have to take it.
Peace, love for Baja, and all the fish tacos anyone would want.
Years ago, decades ago, I recall stopping at the Ensenada Harbor and buying five fish tacos for a dollar!
"Those were the days my friends".
|
|
pacificobob
Super Nomad
Posts: 2306
Registered: 4-23-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
1969 at age 16 my pals and I loaded up the jalopies and drove to matzatlan where we rented a room across from the central market with a taco shop on
the ground floor. Tacos were 8cents.
That was our primary cuisine for the weeks we hung out there. Damn, we had fun.
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4913
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Offline
|
|
Street tacos were 8 pesos in Mexico City when I was there in 1998. Two years later I came to the Nayarit coast where they were 15 pesos.
|
|
AKgringo
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6025
Registered: 9-20-2014
Location: Anchorage, AK (no mas!)
Member Is Offline
Mood: Retireded
|
|
I don't remember what the street tacos cost at a stand in Cabo in 1986, but I do remember the look on the vendor's face when I ordered two dozen of
them. It was for my wife and I and three teen-age boys.
If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space!
"Could do better if he tried!" Report card comments from most of my grade school teachers. Sadly, still true!
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4913
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by AKgringo | I don't remember what the street tacos cost at a stand in Cabo in 1986, but I do remember the look on the vendor's face when I ordered two dozen of
them. It was for my wife and I and three teen-age boys. |
I was standing behind a woman I knew in the supermarket lineup who had her cart piled high with cases of groceries. I said it looked like she was
having a party? "Nope, we have 4 teenage boys at home."
When I was a kid, my cousins' family lived close to us and would visit often. There were 4 boys. The oldest who was a teenager at the time would walk
in the door and ask first thing, "Got anything to eat?" My aunt would turn to him and say, "We just had dinner half an hour ago!"
|
|
Pages:
1
2 |