'It's insane.' How rattled Northern Californians weathered 7.0 earthquake and tsunami warning
Briefly

"I have fireplaces flying forward," said Olivia Cobian, the innkeeper at the Gingerbread Mansion, a bed-and-breakfast in the historic town of Ferndale, as sirens wailed in the background Thursday morning. "It's insane." Her building, built in 1895, "looked like a war zone" after the shaking stopped.
"Claw tubs that had been lifted off [their mounts] and scooched over," she said. "This is crazy." Centered under the Pacific Ocean about 70 miles southwest of Eureka, the quake frayed nerves across most of California's North Coast.
In San Francisco, firefighters scanned the beaches and ordered people to evacuate, while dozens of people gathered at the waterfront to watch the waves roll in. One man was seen watching the crashing waves with his dog, while a lone surfer remained out in the water taking advantage of the large swell.
Tsunami evacuation orders and warnings were issued for residents along the coast in West Berkeley, the Mendocino County coast and Pinole, among others. Before noon, the U.S. Tsunami Warning Center canceled the alert, informing residents there was no tsunami threat after all.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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