Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> From: Jim Brick > > Aahhh Ferndale. The earthquake capitol of northern California. Beautiful > place. Take a LARGE HEAVY tripod. ;-) > > Jim > > and from Jeff S who likes Ferndale's Curley's Restaurant, too. . . Yes indeed. I have photos of the coastline southwest of Ferndale just after the three big quakes a few years ago. For 10 miles, the rocks were totally black from dying seaweed where the whole coast line had actually risen three or four feet and all the plants had died. Made for some great tidepooling! Friends of mine were in Petrolia (25 miles from Ferndale) at the epicenter when the first quake hit. The husband had to crawl out of the general store on his hands and knees as canned food rained down on him from the shelves. The wife was trying to just hold onto the chair on the front porch that was trying to buck her out of it. Then the fire started. The volunteer fire dept was right next door, but the doors had jammed shut, so they couldn't get to the pumper truck. As the fire spread toward the gasoline pumps, they retreated up a hill and watched the whole building burn down. The lady from the post office was still nursing her bruises from when she had run out of her door, not knowing that the quake had knocked down the stairs she expected to still be there. Later that night, the next big quake hit. My father-in-law was a Caltrans foreman, inspecting the US 101 bridge crossing the Eel River at Rio Dell. He could watch blue earthquake lights and the entire bridge undulating in large waves as he thought about the river 100 feet below. Fortunately the bridge survived. Unfortunately, at the other end of the bridge the center of the town of Scotia didn't. Burst gas pipes started the shopping center on fire and the main business part of town burned to the ground. Then the third one hit. All within about 24 hours, each was a separate earthquake of about 7.0 magnitude, not the piddley little 5.0 aftershocks, which sometimes scare you more, because you don't know what they are going to turn into again. By this time, you figured that the earth was jelly, so just watch what you sit under, and don't set your cameras or any other valuable on a shelf more than one foot above the floor. Lately I've getting complacent. Shame on me - just across the room, an M2 with Visoflex II, bellows and 90mm Elmarit is sitting close the edge of a counter (and you thought this post was off-topic!). So anyone still want to do a photo seminar near Eureka? Actually, the Midwest seems to get as much damage and far more loss of life in one month of tornadoes than we get in 20 years of earthquakes. So if you've seen our Lost Coast several years ago, well come back again. It's changed. Gary Todoroff Eureka, CA