Was it earthquake, tsunami, tornado, storm, flood, or?

  • Pronell@lemmy.world
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    9 minutes ago

    Hurricane in Florida in the 80s, but I was far enough inland to not be in danger. The eye of the storm is really spooky. Complete and utter silence.

    Also the 1991 snowstorm in Duluth MN. Started snowing on Halloween and didn’t stop for three days. We had four feet of snow in the yard.

    That was a lot of fun, the town was paralyzed for a couple of days until the plows started to get things in order.

  • Zarcher@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Experienced a river flooding due to excessive rainfall. Both on a small scale on a camping where some tents floated away, which was kind of funny because the owners had warned not to pitch the tents to close to the river.

    More recently witnessed a large scale flooding last winter when large parts of the rhine flooded. There were no casualties in my region, but the damage was quite severe. Very sobering to see the death toll in the upstream regions. Also the impact to agriculture and infrastructure, with frequent rain keeping the ground fully saturated for months al the way up to summer.

    Water is so vital for human civilization, and yet also very dangerous.

  • AstralPath@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    Does Ice Storm '98 count? As a kid, it was super wild to wake up to our house being ~10C then realizing that the heat wasn’t gonna be turning back on for a loooooong time.

    Fortunately our neighbor had a gas stove in his basement and invited a bunch of folks from the neighborhood to use his house as a shelter for a while. It was super fun playing outdoors in the ice though. Literally everything was covered with inches of ice. You could put on a pair of skates and go anywhere you wanted for a couple days.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_1998_North_American_ice_storm

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago
    • you have experienced: you experienced something
    • you have BEEN experienced: something experienced you

    Compare: dropped. “You have dropped it” vs “you have been dropped”

    or?

    You’ve left words out.

  • frank@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    Yup, Helene, a few months ago, in Asheville NC.

    You could say I’m still experiencing it, I suppose. We’ve always been a place that’s too far inland for a hurricane. Very climate insulated. That bubble has burst for us here after this storm.

    It was super scary, no cell service for days, no power or water or gas for days. We have a great network of people so we were supported and supporting but it went bad for many others.

    But more than scary right now, it’s sad. Just seeing the devastation

  • coaxil@lemm.ee
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    6 hours ago

    Live in Australia, so lotta fire, and been in Brisbane for a while now, and it’s gone underwater a good few times during my time here, large floods are not very fun!

  • Tazerface@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    I live in Halifax, Nova Scotia. We really don’t get natural disasters here.

    The closest we get in Halifax is a Cat 3 hurricane once every 3 or 4 years, multiple blizzards each winter, we get light freezing rain once a year and a significant amount about every 10 years.

    We lose power for a few hours many times per year because our power company is privately owned and has to answer to shareholders.

    I once went without power for 3 days.

    Could be a lot worse.

  • RegalPotoo@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I was in Christchurch for the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes that killed 185 people and critically damaged essentially every building within the city centre.

    The whole thing was pretty surreal. My family were pretty lucky, our house was lightly damaged (old timber frame, moved ~2cm off its piles but was livable while that was fixed) and we had a few things break (including a 60L fishtank that nearly landed on me as I tried to get to a doorway), I know a few people who were without electricity and clean water for a week, or whose houses were damaged beyond repair then had to spend years fighting insurance companies to get what they were due.

    I still live in the city, and it’s pretty much unrecognisable as to how it was before. Basically every major building in the central city had to either be torn down or significantly renovated to repair it. Basically every brick building built before the 1950s was damaged beyond repair. Huge chunks of residential land in the east of the city was so badly damaged that there is no way it could be safely built on again - the government brought all the houses, tore them down and fenced the area off.

      • Seaflea@lemmynsfw.com
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        1 hour ago

        7.1 in 2010 6.2 in 2011

        Interesting tidbit: The 2011 earthquake had a lower magnitude however it had 3x the wave frequency than the 2010 which made it feel much more violent.

        The first one was west of Christchurch, the second was south. Different direction of the waves brought many of the already weakened buildings down.

        Where I was staying was on the hill of the epicenter of the second earthquake. Couldn’t stay from fear a boulder would roll through the house during an aftershock. I remember after every aftershock running outside to make sure nothing was coming our way.

        The 2011 earthquake was not long before the Japan earthquake.

        I flew into Christchurch the night before the 2011 earthquake, couldn’t do anything from all the damage. Flew to Indonesia. In Indonesia woke up to the rumble of a 6+ mag earthquake off the coast of Bali and ran out of the house…

        That’s when Japan was already having 7+ magnitude earthquakes. The next day was the 9 magnitude earthquake in Japan.

        Incredible experience.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    I was 183 miles from Mount Saint Helens when it blew up in 1980. We still had half an inch of ash. The volcano was on a Sunday, school was cancelled on Monday. We had to wear dust masks to go outside.

    When we got closer to the mountain, everything smelled like rotten eggs (sulfur). Even weeks later.

    https://youtu.be/SFHfXalElJw

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    11 hours ago

    Had a tornado go by 1/4 mile from our house once. It was dark so we didn’t really realize how close it was at the time. My dad and I were on the front porch when the sirens went off and were like “yea, whatever” because those things go off just about every time we have a storm in spring. Then we felt the air pressure drop and were like “Oh, shit, maybe we should go inside”. The next day we drove by where it went through and saw all the debris everywhere. Fortunately it was mostly empty field and didn’t hit any houses.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        3 hours ago

        It went from feeling normal to feeling like there was less air around instantly. Like it was slightly harder to breathe and just feels lighter. It’s hard to explain. The closest thing I’d compare it to was going to someplace that’s a high altitude but it was an instant drop instead of changing as you go up.

      • nnullzz@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        To me at least, it feels like the air got heavier (even though it’s really getting lighter). That could be followed by your ears popping. Some people like me get joint pain. My wife gets migraines right away with big pressure drops. Atmospheric pressure is a weird thing.

  • pedz@lemmy.ca
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    9 hours ago

    I was 15 during the 1998 ice storm.

    It’s obviously not as dangerous as a tornado or an earthquake or a flood, but it’s still a natural disaster, and disrupted society in the region for weeks and months.

    At first it was difficult to realize the size of the catastrophe but then millions went without power, the infrastructure crumbled under the ice and roads became impracticable. The magnitude of the disaster became apparent when the army had to come and help.

    Luckily I lived in a rural area at the time and we relied on a wood furnace for heat and hot water. We also shared a generator with other family members so I had power a few hours a day. Compared to people without heat water, food or electricity, it went ok for my family.

    It took about 10 days for my region to have power back, while others had to wait for up to 30 days.

    This left its mark on me and now I try to be prepared, have batteries charged, solar panels, water reserves, food for a few days, a camping stove, ways to keep warm, etc., just in case.