kevin_standlee: (Kevin and Lisa)
Yesterday afternoon, Lisa and I headed for Reno/Sparks for our second Pfizer vaccine dose. I got away from work early (after only eight hours, rather than my more typical 9-10 hours), so we also took the many boxes of glass bottles we'd been accumulating so that we could dump them at the facility in Reno. We'd noticed on our last pass through there that the big Twin City Surplus store in Reno where we had bought many things over the years has closed. It had previously shrunk in size by 50%, and it had looked to us that new owners had pivoted from the original military-surplus model to just buying cheap Chinese stuff from a distributor, so it was no surprise to us, and not as much of a loss as it could have been, for them to go out of business. Photos on Yelp show them having been evicted.

After dealing with the recycling, we headed for the Safeway store in Sparks, where we had an appointment for our second doses at their pharmacy. Although we were about an hour early for our appointment time, they were able to handle us. I wish I'd known that we'd need to submit the same waiver forms we'd done the first time around; I would have saved the PDFs from last time rather than having to fill them out again. I've saved those PDFs now, in case a round of booster shots is forthcoming.

The same pharmacist shot us up as last time. Lisa complained to me that instead of moving his rolling chair around to her right side (because she's mostly left handed, she prefers vaccinations be in her right shoulder), he hunched over her, so she felt the injection was less smooth than it should have been.

Rather than staying in the waiting area for the requested fifteen minutes, we did some grocery shopping, on the ground that if either of us had felt an unusual reaction, it would be easy enough to go back to the pharmacy area. Although we rarely shop at Safeway, they had given us 10% discount coupons, cross-marketing that worked for them in this case as we bought stuff that saved us a separate shopping trip. By the time we'd finished our shopping, the fifteen minute waiting period had ended, so we paid for our groceries and headed for home. We spent the evening sitting on our porch watching one of the local rabbits munch on the grass growing in the lot on the other side of our fence. (You go bunny! Eat them weeds!)

Yesterday evening around 9:30 PM, just as I was getting ready to shut off the computer and head for bed, I started feeling dizzy, as if I was shaking. At first I thought it was a strange reaction to the vaccination, but then I realized that I was shaking. It was an earthquake! There was no other obvious shaking, noise from the house, fixtures moving, etc. I checked the USGS earthquake site, and sure enough, there had been an earthquake northwest of Truckee and about 90 km west of Fernley. It was a 4.7 'quake, one of a swarm of three quakes in about a ten minute period, with the other two shakers being in the 3 range. Lisa said she thought it felt like a heavy freight train passing at just the right speed, something with which we are quite familiar, but there was no train. (As it happens, while I composed that last sentence, just such a train passed our house.)

This morning, my left shoulder feels a bit like I've been kicked by a mule; it seems worse than the previous dose, but I may be imagining it. I'm also slightly woozy, but that could still just be from not getting as much sleep last night as I should have thanks to the excitement of the earthquake.
kevin_standlee: Round logo with text "Tonopah, Nevada - Westercon 74 - July 1-4, 2022 - A Bright Idea" (Tonopah Westercon)
There was a 6.5 earthquake 56 km / 35 miles northwest of Tonopah, Nevada this morning. It woke me up just after 4 AM. Given that I'm used to sleeping through passing heavy freight trains running 80 m / 260 ft north of our house on the Union Pacific mainline, that's really saying something. Lisa (who has been up at night and sleeping days lately) also felt it.

Reports I've seen show that Tonopah itself was mostly unharmed although groceries did fall off shelves. It appears that the worst damage was a large crack across US-95 near the epicenter. That required US-95 to be closed between NV-360 and US-6 while NVDOT made emergency repairs. The highway reopened around 2 PM today.

Where I live in Fernley is about 125 mi / 200 km (as the crow flies) north from the epicenter of the 'quake. People reported feeling it from Portland to Phoenix and Salt Lake City to San Diego.

Western Nevada and Eastern California do get earthquakes. When I lived in Bishop CA, I was there when we had a swarm of 6.0 quakes (three in four days as I recall). Although the major earthquake faults on California's west coast get more publicity, the inland area have their own share of activity, mostly as I understand it volcanic in nature. There are numerous hot springs throughout this area, and you don't get hot springs without hot rocks down beneath the surface, and that means geologically active areas.

I'm glad to hear that there were apparently no injuries or serious damage other than the cracked roadway.
kevin_standlee: (Conrunner Kevin)
[LiveJournal continues to act up. I can't change the default user icon. I can't see user comments if I'm logged in. I do still get e-mail notifications of comments posted to my journal. These problems are on multiple browsers, I've reported them. Whether LJ decides to fix them, I don't know. I don't want to leave LJ inasmuch as I have a life membership and I do actually much prefer it to Facebook and the like, but I do hope they get this problem fixed soon.]

Lisa is currently on a very night-owl schedule. Some hours after I'd gone to bed, she came and woke me up and told me that we'd just had an earthquake. She'd felt it strongly. I didn't, but I might have felt one of the other ones that happened after I'd gone back to sleep, because I woke up again later for no obvious reason. These earthquakes happened in Hawthorne, Nevada, about 100 miles south of Fernley, and were in the 5.5-5.7 range.

Visible Sign of the Earthquake at Our House )

This swarm of quakes is similar to those that hit the Bishop, California area over the Memorial Day Weekend in 1980 when I lived there and was in in high school.
kevin_standlee: Kevin after losing a lot of weight. He peaked at 330, but over the following years got it down to 220 and continues to lose weight. (Default)
Why yes, I did feel the Berkeley Earthquake from my office in San Mateo this afternoon. Initially showing as 4.2, it's been downgraded to 3.9 as of the last time I looked. I wouldn't have realized it was actually an earthquake rather than someone in a hurry bounding by my cubicle (our floors are annoyingly springy that way) until my co-workers started getting slightly excited. No harm done here, nor anything dislodged.

We get more shaking at the trailer at Fernley House when a heavy freight train goes by.
kevin_standlee: Kevin after losing a lot of weight. He peaked at 330, but over the following years got it down to 220 and continues to lose weight. (Default)
When I got home, I had a look around. Despite having numerous opportunities for things to fall off of shelves, nothing was obviously knocked over.
kevin_standlee: (Pensive Kevin)
Well, that was interesting. A reasonably-sized earthquake just shook the Bay Area. The initial reports have the magnitude at 5.6 (moderate) and the epicenter being northeast of San Jose, but I certainly felt it here at my office in the hills above San Mateo. It felt like a sort of rolling sensation for up to ten seconds or so. Areas built on fill land reported longer rocking and rolling. News reports have things having come off shelves in San Jose-area grocery stores. The epicenter is closer to my house than it is to my office, so I'll be interested in seeing if anything went wrong at home.

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