Well, I am 3 miles from the Calaveras fault. Under 3: no big deal. Mostly ripples.
Let’s go back to 2020. Fire evac, Cal Fire tells me they have no air support for our fire but we should evacuate. My property was first line of defense for the neighborhood. Air support is in Sonoma protecting Gavin and Nancy’s wineries.
Yeah, some things never seem to change in CA.
Put yourself in my shoes. Your don’t know if you got a house and barn, from Fire or Quakes. Been there too many times. 5 to be exact. That is why I do what I do.
I can't say I don't feel similar. I can't get home insurance, even when I move the home to the foundation. AFAIK, there's over the BS affordable act that will provide crap insurance for $5k/year.
My wife’s house was built in to the bedrock and had 1 thing fall off a shelf in Northridge quake in the Sunland area. She was more fearful of the fires we had in 2024 We watched from the south edge of a resivoir.
It was the Sylmar quake in '71 was the first time I had seen an overpass collapse, on TV. That was up by Sunland. I vaguely remember a place called Lake View Terrace, up in that area where I got stuck in a 4WD when I was first learning about off road driving. Then in '89, when the Loma Prieta quack hit in Los Gatos area, the Bay Bridge collapsed with cars crossing on it...I was in SoCal at the time, but the housing market had plummeted in the Bay Area, I had friend move back to NC, only to move back to CA about 5 years later. People get used to this lifestyle. It wasn't until I bought my house in West San Jose around mid '90s that the prices started to go up...that Loma Prieta left everyone in fear around the Bay Area for years. I've been through most of the big ones...most of which were in L.A. area, but believe it or not, the San Andreas runs all the way up to Lake County. I'm known geoligists in the past and everyone I spoke with has said that even though Mount Konocti is still active, it stands much less chance of going off than Mammoth, but I don't think we can predict Mother Nature.
You mentioned the Northridge quake. My house was close to Balboa/Victory, if you know the Valley area, right by Birmingham High School. We were about 5 miles from the Epicenter, which was at CSUN. I worked in Santa Monica, next to the airport. That building was condemned, and had cracks about 2' wide, running up through the concrete walls. That was about 30 miles away from the epicenter, go figure...
