Pilawt
Final Approach
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Pilawt
It was 25 years ago today, January 17, 1994, at 4:31 AM. I awakened to the sound of my wife yelling, "Break his door down, if you have to!" (addressed to our son down the hall, referencing his younger brother in the next room). I also had a sensation of violent motion, akin to what a pair of sneakers would feel in a tumble dryer. About that time there was the sound of the grandfather clock falling against our bedroom door, and other background sounds of things breaking.
It was the magnitude 6.7 Northridge Earthquake, epicentered three miles from us.
We gathered ourselves together and exited the house through the bedroom glass slider to the patio. It was a brilliantly-clear pre-dawn; warm for mid-January, with a mild "Santa Ana" wind (the warm, dry wind that flows from the desert through passes and canyons into the Los Angeles coastal area in winter months) in progress. But the patio was wet -- from water that had sloshed out of the swimming pool. And the ground was still shaking.
It was the most spectacular night sky we'd ever seen in Los Angeles, because all city lights had been knocked out in the quake. We could see a small brush fire on the brushy hill north of us (likely a downed power line), and a glow in the northeast, from the gas main explosion on Balboa Boulevard in Granada Hills that took out an entire block of homes. It was bizarre. It seemed like Armageddon.
We greeted the sunrise with neighbors on our front lawns and in the street, making sure everyone was okay and waiting for enough daylight to go back into our homes to see what was left.
We were relatively fortunate. Structural damage was limited to the brick chimney and slumpstone property-line walls, all of which had to be replaced. Lots of knick-knacks in the house were broken. Because of the lateral motion of the quake, things that were on east or west walls fell, and things on north-south walls generally stayed put.
Some neighbors were not so fortunate. In the house immediately behind ours, the same design and floor plan as ours, the roof collapsed.
Constant aftershocks dissuaded us from going back in the house after dark. We spent the first night in sleeping bags in our son's pickup truck in the driveway, and the second night in a pup tent on the front lawn. After that, neighbors allowed our sons to sleep in their large motor home parked at the curb.
Sadly, about 60 people perished in the quake, many of them in a three-story apartment complex in Northridge that collapsed onto the first floor. At least one, an LAPD motorcycle officer, died when a freeway bridge collapsed. Had it not been the Martin Luther King holiday, surely many more would have been killed on the highways.
It wasn't just the main quake ... frequent, strong aftershocks continued for months, and after a couple of weeks the constant shaking was driving us nuts. Caltech said there were more than 11,000 aftershocks in the first eleven months after the initial quake. In that time, more than 400 aftershocks were large enough to feel, including 8 between magnitude 5.0 and 5.9; 48 between magnitude 4.0 and 4.9; and 367 between magnitude 3.0 and 3.9
The swimming pool was our seismometer -- when water shloshed out onto the deck in an aftershock, we knew it was magnitude 5.0 or better. Scientists interviewed on TV beamed like kids with a new toy: "Wow, we sure learned a lot from this one -- we didn't even know that fault was there! For all we know this might just be a foreshock of an even bigger one!!" (Thanks for sharing -- we recalled that every time another aftershock started.) Our next-door neighbor, a retired RCAF CF-104 pilot, spent the next two weeks standing on the sidewalk in front of his house with a highball in his hand, reluctant to go back inside. "I'd rather be shot at in combat," he said.
Electric power in our neighborhood was out for 24 hours. Landline phones were down. Not until afternoon of the first day were we able to get through on my suitcase-sized cell phone to let out-of-town relatives know we were okay. There was no water for a week. I learned it took four one-gallon milk jugs full of water carried in from the swimming pool for each toilet flush. We had to boil water for two weeks thereafter.
Our law firm was based in Granada Hills, but had a branch office in Palmdale. What had been a 45-drive between offices suddenly became a four-hour trek on two-lane secondary roads to bypass the damaged freeway bridges. I rented a Saratoga to shuttle files and office equipment between Van Nuys and Fox Field, Lancaster, a 15-minute flight.
Material things eventually got fixed or replaced, and we moved to the Northwest a year and a half later (a decision that had been made before the quake). So then we lived 35 miles from an active volcano. But there are emotional effects of that morning that will never go away.
More photos here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/SdFuYHNHSqVYQqjA8
It was the magnitude 6.7 Northridge Earthquake, epicentered three miles from us.
We gathered ourselves together and exited the house through the bedroom glass slider to the patio. It was a brilliantly-clear pre-dawn; warm for mid-January, with a mild "Santa Ana" wind (the warm, dry wind that flows from the desert through passes and canyons into the Los Angeles coastal area in winter months) in progress. But the patio was wet -- from water that had sloshed out of the swimming pool. And the ground was still shaking.
It was the most spectacular night sky we'd ever seen in Los Angeles, because all city lights had been knocked out in the quake. We could see a small brush fire on the brushy hill north of us (likely a downed power line), and a glow in the northeast, from the gas main explosion on Balboa Boulevard in Granada Hills that took out an entire block of homes. It was bizarre. It seemed like Armageddon.
We greeted the sunrise with neighbors on our front lawns and in the street, making sure everyone was okay and waiting for enough daylight to go back into our homes to see what was left.
We were relatively fortunate. Structural damage was limited to the brick chimney and slumpstone property-line walls, all of which had to be replaced. Lots of knick-knacks in the house were broken. Because of the lateral motion of the quake, things that were on east or west walls fell, and things on north-south walls generally stayed put.
Some neighbors were not so fortunate. In the house immediately behind ours, the same design and floor plan as ours, the roof collapsed.
Constant aftershocks dissuaded us from going back in the house after dark. We spent the first night in sleeping bags in our son's pickup truck in the driveway, and the second night in a pup tent on the front lawn. After that, neighbors allowed our sons to sleep in their large motor home parked at the curb.
Sadly, about 60 people perished in the quake, many of them in a three-story apartment complex in Northridge that collapsed onto the first floor. At least one, an LAPD motorcycle officer, died when a freeway bridge collapsed. Had it not been the Martin Luther King holiday, surely many more would have been killed on the highways.
It wasn't just the main quake ... frequent, strong aftershocks continued for months, and after a couple of weeks the constant shaking was driving us nuts. Caltech said there were more than 11,000 aftershocks in the first eleven months after the initial quake. In that time, more than 400 aftershocks were large enough to feel, including 8 between magnitude 5.0 and 5.9; 48 between magnitude 4.0 and 4.9; and 367 between magnitude 3.0 and 3.9
The swimming pool was our seismometer -- when water shloshed out onto the deck in an aftershock, we knew it was magnitude 5.0 or better. Scientists interviewed on TV beamed like kids with a new toy: "Wow, we sure learned a lot from this one -- we didn't even know that fault was there! For all we know this might just be a foreshock of an even bigger one!!" (Thanks for sharing -- we recalled that every time another aftershock started.) Our next-door neighbor, a retired RCAF CF-104 pilot, spent the next two weeks standing on the sidewalk in front of his house with a highball in his hand, reluctant to go back inside. "I'd rather be shot at in combat," he said.
Electric power in our neighborhood was out for 24 hours. Landline phones were down. Not until afternoon of the first day were we able to get through on my suitcase-sized cell phone to let out-of-town relatives know we were okay. There was no water for a week. I learned it took four one-gallon milk jugs full of water carried in from the swimming pool for each toilet flush. We had to boil water for two weeks thereafter.
Our law firm was based in Granada Hills, but had a branch office in Palmdale. What had been a 45-drive between offices suddenly became a four-hour trek on two-lane secondary roads to bypass the damaged freeway bridges. I rented a Saratoga to shuttle files and office equipment between Van Nuys and Fox Field, Lancaster, a 15-minute flight.
Material things eventually got fixed or replaced, and we moved to the Northwest a year and a half later (a decision that had been made before the quake). So then we lived 35 miles from an active volcano. But there are emotional effects of that morning that will never go away.
More photos here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/SdFuYHNHSqVYQqjA8
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