Los Angeles area jolted by earthquake. Holly Lawson was working in a
campground kiosk at Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, about 60 miles
south of the epicenter of Monday's earthquake, when the windows in
her tiny kiosk began to rattle.
The
rolling rumble lasted about six seconds, she said, and she could see
a man outside in his truck as it swayed back and forth.
"The
truck was actually physically moving," Lawson said.
A
San Diego native, she had already guessed the temblor's magnitude by
the time the shaking stopped.
"I'm
always concerned about these windows when we feel a quake," she
said. "We're surrounded by them."
Lawson,
who lives in Anza, near the quake's epicenter, got a call from her
teenage son soon after, who reported there had been a loud, sudden
crack of sound before the shaking began. Their home, which is a
manufactured house, had experienced small cracks after a similar
earthquake about a year ago, and Monday she told her son to search
for damage to the walls, water lines and propane lines.
Meanwhile,
campers in nearby RVs came one by one to ask if that had, indeed,
been an earthquake "or if they were just going crazy," said
Lawson.
MaryAnn McKennon, a volunteer camp host and Idaho native, said she didn't
know what was going on at first.
"My
first thought was that we've been having some funky winds, and
sometimes they blow pretty hard," she said. Soon she saw the
truck outside rocking, too.
"I
didn't like it at all," said McKennon, who has worked on and off
at the campsite for 6 years. "Do you ever get used to them?"
Although
some lifelong Southern Californians didn't bat an eye at Monday's quake, it was a different story for Minnesota transplant Shannon
Haber. Even though she's lived here since 1996, Haber said, she
definitely has not gotten used to earthquakes.
“I
was just a little frightened,” Haber said. “There was small
shaking and it made me nervous because I’m 23 floors up.”
Haber
was working in Los Angeles Unified School District headquarters in
Westlake when the earthquake shook at 9:56 a.m. more than 100 miles
away in Anza in Riverside County. The shaking was the biggest and
longest-lasting she could remember.
“It
was a slow, swaying motion,” she said. “It sort of felt like I
was on a boat, a sort of wavy feeling that lasted 10 to 20 seconds. …
No one else reacted around me. They’re all veterans of
earthquakes.”
In
Anza, about 10 customers had sat down to a late breakfast at a Diner
371 when the quake struck about 20 miles away.
Nothing
was broken and no one was hurt, said Diner 371 waitress Michelle Padaron, 30, who was stocking tables with napkins when the quake
struck.
After
four seconds of shaking, customers quickly returned to their meals of
burgers, burritos and eggs, Padaron said.
"Everyone
just kind of looked up, then looked at each other, and that was it,"
Padaron said.
Source:
Latimes
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