Everyone in the Bay Area is mostly likely fine, I am. 5.3 in the area is once every couple of years. Due to the building codes here, we are quite safe up to the mid 6 range.
Both my grandmas were in the 06 quake (7.9). One had a the house collapse around the family which was bundled up in a bed. Something of a famous photo resulted. The other had to live in the park for a while.
My wife’s an earthquake newbie and was lying in bed. I was in the bathroom brushing my teeth, felt a little bump and didn’t give it a second though–that is, not until she came running with this panicked look in her eyes. She was up for the next hour going through the news channels wanting some confirmation that it was serious enough to justify her response. Very cute (although it was hard not to laugh when the various live anchors would say “Well, we didn’t feel anything here”).
5.2’s a decent size; glad to see the injuries and damage were pretty minor compared to the Napa one of the same size a year or two ago (that one really freaked her out; I was in Europe at the time, though I was here for Loma Prieta but she wasn’t).
It was a good shake here in the heart of SF - and my building is on bedrock. 5.2 is enough that there may be some small damage near the epicenter, but for most of us it’s just the fault lines saying “what’s up?”
I was at the computer, with my foot on the wall. Soon-to-be Mrs. Giraffe was just sliding the closet door shut when I felt the wall vibrating. My first thought was “Damn! She really slammed that closet door! The whole building is shaking!” Then I realized it was an earthquake, waited a second to see if it was going to get a lot stronger, then went back to what I was doing.
Soon-to-be Mrs. Giraffe ran to the doorway, where she stood looking excited and exclaiming that I should join her there. She’s from the Midwest. This same woman watched TV five feet from a sliding glass door throughout my first tornado warning, when a twister was headed right for town. I crouched next to the bathtub and yelled at her.
I’m here too. I felt it, and the boys came running out of their rooms asking if I felt it. The funniest was the wife who freaked (and she’s a native Oaklander). Most of my building emptied out. Of course we live on top of the Hayward fault so we feel the smalls one quite easy. We all had a good laugh and were quieted down within 15 minutes.
It was a nice 5 seconds or so of shakes.
I was at a friend’s house…they were trying to dive under the kitchen table while I finished watching a movie on a TV that was threatening to fall off the entertainment unit.
Nice little shaker last night. Figured it was a ways from Alameda due to the time difference between the two waves. I heard the same report as Sue- one house burned due to leaky gas line.
I’m fine, i thought a fat dude was running on my roof until there was more shaking than Jabba the Hutt could have done. But now i’m an earthquake survivor, where’s my T-shirt?
heathen, all the government sites I checked yesterday used the Richter scale (and I was sent to the real time sites by geologists), so it’s clearly still in widespread use.
To those of us in non-quake prone countries, 5.2 - while technically “moderate” - has the capacity to inflict substantial damage because our buildings aren’t purpose-built to cope with such geological events as they are in SF.
Was landing in a jet plane at the time…didn’t feel it. My roommate, who picked me up, did. She was in Berkeley at a cafe and saw the glass window wobble a bit.