Tsunami Warning (not ff)

Paul,
Here is some good news!“If a Tsunami is a’comin’, warning will come from above.” End Quote.

BROOKINGS, Ore. (AP) - Oregon Civil Air Patrol planes equipped with loudspeakers will help warn coastal residents if a tsunami heads their way.

On a recent test run, pilot Scott Bakker used a tiny MP3 player hooked to a powerful speaker aboard a Cessna 337 Skymaster to see how far a warning message could be heard. It wasn’t long before Bakker got a response.

“I could hear everything you said,” Curry County sheriff’s Capt. Dennis Dinsmore said over the radio from his office.

The loudspeaker can be heard from up to 3 miles away at 1,000 or more feet above ground.

Within 20 minutes, Bakker says, he or one of the other handful of pilots trained to fly the Skymaster or its speaker-equipped counterpart, a Cessna 182 Skylane, can be airborne en route to a half-dozen population centers from Coos Bay to Eureka, Calif.

The warning goes like this: “Attention, attention. This is an official warning. A tsunami is imminent. Go to high ground.”

Bakker and the other pilots with the U.S. Air Force auxiliary unit, the Civil Air Patrol, are supplied with pagers from the Curry County sheriff’s office, linked to the county’s tsunami warning system.

When the pagers go off, the pilots head to the airport. In rural areas such as the south coast, where Curry County’s 15 operational stationary sirens are sporadic and people might not be listening to their radios or watching television, Bakker’s planes may be the first to warn thousands of people.

“It’s going to help us immensely,” said Mike Brace, emergency coordinator for the Curry County Emergency Services Department.

“As far as we know, it’s one of a kind on the coast. Its a great leg in the stool, with the airplane, tsunami sirens and radio stations, to get as many venues as we can to get the alert out to people,” Brace said.

The idea came about after a phone call in December 2006 from Spencer Kim, who was desperately looking for his son James, stranded in the Rogue River wilderness in December 2006 with his wife and their two daughters.

James Kim died of hypothermia after hiking away from his family to look for help. By the time Spencer Kim hired a private helicopter and another volunteer searcher spotted the rest of the his family, his son was dead, if only for a few hours.

The elder Kim had wanted Bakker’s help, as commander of the local Civil Air Patrol. But there was nothing Bakker could do.

“The Air Force told us to stand down,” Bakker said.

Bakker wonders whether things might have been different if he’d been free to use the Civil Air Patrol’s planes without a request from authorities. So he formed a nonprofit group, the Guardians from Above, that operates with its own budget and can act independently of an official order.

The last time anyone died in Oregon and Northern California from a tsunami was in 1964, when the Good Friday earthquake in Alaska created a tsunami that killed 12 people in Crescent City, Calif., and four on the Oregon Coast.
Doug

Well, Doug thanks anyway, but as the article states… “They’ll fly from Coos Bay to Eureka with the warnings”. WHICH, I admit is NICE…if Coos Bay wasn’t over 125 miles south of here!
Oddly,Seaside, where I live recently had a series of “Tidal Wave Warning Drills” over this past summer. (tsunami, sorry).
When the first drill, took place, a time and series of locations were given for residents to head for, on higher ground around our area.
Of course, being a drill, no one was much concerned, but many DID actually follow the drill’s procedures and all went well. Even the chief of police and the mayor, were found high up on the surrounding hillsides, to take part in the drill.
That drill, was in July of last year.
In September, of last year, we had a REAL tsunami warning take place,due to an under ocean earthquake off off Indonesia. The sirens went off, police and state cops drove around, announcing; “This is NOT A DRILL, etc.” through the bullhorns on their patrol cars.
During this REAL, not a DRILL, operation the chief of police (as well as head of emergency services in case of disaster) AND the mayor of Seaside, could not be located. Until, that is, they were BOTH found…down on the BEACH near the surf’s edge, with their own, personal, digital , cameras…“waiting to see, if we could get some neat pictures!”, (as quoted by our intelligent mayor of the time).
So, now, when the drill sirens go off, I make a snack or tie a fly or even take a nap, knowing full well, just how well I’m protected from such things…

I was a Marine Radio Operator on the Pacific Coast of Vancouver Island in the 1960s. In the summer of 1969 We received a tsunami warning from Rescue Center for immediate broadcast to all ships at sea and community land based stations.

It was quite a dire warning. I can’t remember it exactly but it went something like this.

All stations all stations, all stations. this is coast guard station Spring Island Loran, Tsunami Warning , a tsunami estimated at five zero feet in height traveling approximately 500 miles per hour is approaching the Pacific coast. estimated time to landfall; Koyuquot 3:10 pm , Gold river 3:15 pm , Tofino 3:22 Victoria. 3:45 pm It is strongly advised all persons head for higher ground immediately.

To this warning we added the words Tidal Wave believing that some people would not know what a Tsunami was. ( prior to this they had always been called Tidal Wave warnings ) We got poo from headquarters for this addition. They said in their message " we want the public to get used to the word tsunami"

This gave about a half hours warning till it was due. We were on a small Island off the west coast of Vancouver Island and were directly in the path of this 50 foot wave. It was more than a half hour to Vancouver island from where we were. The darn Islands highest point was only 32 feet above sea level . It was High tide at the time and just at shift change. We did the math and with no where to Hide, most of us just went down to the beach to watch it come in. The wave hit with incredible speed but was only about 2 feet high at the most. It did a bit of damage to some boats up and down the coast but as far as I know no one was hurt.

The 1964 waves Did a lot of damage in Kyuquot but no deaths or serious injuries happened when the 4 separate waves hit. The biggest was approximately 12 feet high.

We were lucky that day and we joked about it a lot, but I would never ignore a warning. Huge tidal waves have Historicly struck the US and Canadian coast and are quite possible. If your told to go to high ground don’t go to the beach to take pictures unless its in a helicopter.

GnuBee;
Although the “mayor and chief of police story” is 101% TRUE, (as sad as that IS, to have to admit, we’re considered “kept safe” by such fools), where I live, we’re already protected from any tsunami hitting the coast.
Our property is 3 miles, from the surf as the crow flies and the house is located high up, on a prehistoric sand dune about 300’ above sea level.
I joked about “tying flies, etc.” when a warning goes off, ONLY because of our personal location. YOU are very correct in saying “take these things, very, very, seriously” and I would, if living in harm’s way!!
I remember, the tsunami in the 60s that hit Seaside and the people that lost their homes and property from that one. All kidding aside, most folks don’t BEGIN to realize the destructive forces of moving water.
It’s the reason, that every year, when I volunteer for beach patrol here and we TRY to warn the tourists about “logs in the surf”, “Sneaker waves”, “high tides and rocks”, whatever, we still end up having to risk out own lives to rescue the ones that don’t listen when we tell them.

I was a resident of Alaska during the Good Friday Earthquake.
Quite an event.

Rick

I wired the new Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska a couple yrs ago…about a year before the big one they just had overseas {Sri Lanka etc}…I can assure you a lot goes into it…its the only time I have ever had to ground the floor and the carpet to a grid to prevent electrical static build up…my next door neighbor is always on call as he is the main scientist there and earthquakes happen every hr so he stays busy

HAD to be scary, Rick!! I’m just glad you survived it, to still join us here!