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Has Anyone Heard From Lenton58?

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Old 03-15-11, 05:24 PM
  #126  
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Originally Posted by randyjawa
....I cannot even imagine how long it will be before life in these charming coastal fishing villages returns to normal. It is easy to ‘never’, or least for decades. But, this has not proved to be the case in other great disasters in Japan. It will be some time before normalcy returns to Sendai, but I am hoping for sooner than later. Right now the focus is on essentials such as the power grid and getting the arterioles reopened to supply the region. The details must wait. The roof of some platforms in Sendai station are collapsed. Only local trains are running. The freight yards near our house are idle. The subway runs four or so stations short of its length. The new branch lines under construction may get a much delayed opening. According to one source, the main bridge going into the northern part of the city (Izumi Chuo) is heavily damaged. Lots of roads have cracks, heaves, fissures etc. Because of fuel shortages, there seem to be few buses and no taxis. I drove downtown today and it was nearly empty in comparison to a normal day. Sendai International Airport was flooded by the tsunami and is now being used as a helicopter base at the exclusion of civilian carriers.
In comparison to most U.S. public transportation systems, that sort of performance after such a catastrophe is nothing short of a miracle. Unbelievable resilience.

-Kurt
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Old 03-15-11, 05:32 PM
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Thanks randyjawa,
For some reason I thought I wouldn't be able to post that here. Lenton58 had a few pictures that he took while riding around on his bike also. I really did fear the worst when I saw all the pictures of his area on line. Good news indeed.

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Old 03-15-11, 06:19 PM
  #128  
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Originally Posted by Chombi
I design Hospitals for a living and it's surprising how the nuclear plant designers never thought of tsunamis being a threat to the plant. Emergency power is one of the most critical components of facilities like these....they should have installed the generators on the roof or in it's own tall reinforced structure high above the ground. It's just really weird that they left this loose end on the critical systems emergency operations path. The codes here in CA do not address these either for acute care facilites and I suspect that the lessons learned in Japan will reberverate in the state and cause changes in the codes......

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We were just discussing the lack of a back up power supply for the emergency coolant pumps. A diesel generator or a diesel engine could have kept the coolant pumps turning. A back up for the back up for the back up.

"Two is one, one is none.", or so goes the saying.

Still, I bet the systems were designed for "The BIG One". Here, in southern California, that means 8.0. I think people did not appreciate the possibility of actually seeing a 9.0. I don't think we'd fare too well if we had a 9.0.

I know that here at work, the new construction is designed for 6 g's base shake in each of the three directions. I don't know how to convert that to the Richter scale.

I am gratified and heartened by the behavior of the Japanese people. The behavior of so many in the aftermath of Katrina was a national disgrace.
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Old 03-15-11, 06:40 PM
  #129  
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It was good to read the letter from Lenton58. Thanks for posting it. It's good to hear that not all was destroyed around there and that life, if not returning to normalcy, is still going on. Our best to all over there trying to normalize their lives.

I found this picture/caption in the NJ Star-Ledger. Thought you all might be interested.

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Old 03-15-11, 07:28 PM
  #130  
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Hi Everyone. I just got into New Jersey from the trip I went on for work, and sometime in the last 24hrs or so Lenton sent me an email. I'll post the accompaning pics as soon as I can.

Dear My Frantic Family and Concerned Friends Around the World ... and Especially My Daughter, XXXXX -


Please share this letter one and all. I am unable to write to each of you in turn, and some of you are anxious for some news. So this is my way of getting to each of you in an express way. I am only just able to get back on line and do it. The "To" line contains addresses that span the width and breadth of the globe. Some of you are here in Japan — further south where things were not as violent. But, you understand the trembling earth that is this archipelago. Also you are sharing with us the uncertainty of the current nuclear crisis in Fukushima prefecture. Two of you and your families have survived the tragic quake in Christchurch. All of you have been so very kind and caring. I have been very touched and moved by your concern — a cliché for sure — but I do not know how else to say it. To be cared for imparts a distinct feeling, and I was not prepared for it.


So ... we are safe — Mari, Shoh and I. Shoh was at school. I was in my room doing e-mail and procrastinating a training run on a vintage bicycle I had finished the week before. (More on that good fortune in a bit). Mari was downstairs in the living room.


All quakes start about the same. A tremor ... more ... and then it either shudders and fades ... or the noise starts. This time the shuddering got ever more intense and the roaring just amplified. Everything went crazy. I managed to grip the walls of the staircase as everything upstairs flew around the room. The noise was so loud that I was yelling at Mari. I noticed the fridge dancing around the kitchen like a cartoon animation. A lot of quakes are over in 30 seconds but this one just went on and on ... louder and louder. I was almost convinced that the house would remain standing.


When it was over, I went out into the street. The aftershocks started — and they are still going on. Even as I write now.


The quake involved a large chunk of the Pacific plate — 500 Km long and 200 Km wide. The epicentre was out at sea, more or less opposite Sendai. But, the worst hits from the resulting tsunami were up north. But Sendai and adjacent communities were not left alone. The place to which I was intending to ride was completely destroyed. I may have been safe up on the dike, next to the river — I don't know. I usually turn around short of the sea because the good road ends before the mouth of the Natori River. The attached pictures will give you and idea of the power and destructive force. My outright laziness may have been my best trait that day.


I got on my Yamaha and went towards Shoh's middle school and checked out some neighbours and a day care centre [hoikusho] where we have friends. Everyone was OK. Shoh was with a lot of other students in sports clothes sitting in the school yard. I was not sure what all was going on, but he was safe. I headed for home and there was a thunderstorm that dumped snow so fiercely that it choked the spark in the engine and killed the vision in my visor. The aftershocks continued and they continue as I write this. Every quake starts the same. The tremor ... more ... then the shudders. And if it continues and amplifies — the noise ... and then the roar. Every time this happens, and there has been hundreds of them — unprecedented in memory here — you are wondering if this is another giant quake. Every time it happens you get a great shot of adrenaline shooting into your guts. At least I do.


Shoh is the least bothered. His parents are not feeling too hot — sleeplessness, nausea. Far of becoming radiated and glowing in the dark from some outmoded brood of nuclear reactors down south. I will freely admit to being duly unnerved.


But, we are among the lucky ones. We and our home are intact. Can you imagine feeling all this stuff after being washed around in a tsunami, losing everything, and taking shelter in a place that is short of everything from fuel to food and diapers. Tens of thousands of people are without their medication, and there is concern for serious viral infections. The infrastructure all up and down the coast is shattered. Sendai is practically sealed off, as are all the Pacific coastal communities north of us.


Fleets of helicopters have been chop-chopping their way to missions far and wide — and closer to home to just a few kilometres away — to where I was planing to ride if I had not lingered over e-mail. Two hundred people died there for sure. But a 100 were still missing yesterday.


Many people in Sendai are in refuge centres — including some friends — so I have just heard. Just hours ago our power went back on. But many tens of thousands in this city of one million have been without water, heat or electric power for days. And these "lucky" ones may be living in a twelve story apartment building. As modern as they may be, their residents may find them uninhabitable.


There are line-ups lasting hours for everything. Gasoline has been unavailable due to the lack of electricity for the pumps. Kerosene that space-heats most of our homes is virtually unavailable. I hectored a guy to sell me the last few litres we will get for some time. The city gas is of for at least a month — so it’s cold showers or sponge baths for the duration and no one will be at home on the range.


Nevertheless, no complaints. The shattered cities, the loss of life and colossal destruction are humbling. One man said to me today in his twangy Oz, "It seemed so strange the other day ... it was so sunny, and there were children playing in the park and people talking in the street, yet a few kilometres away there was all this death!"


I cannot even imagine how long it will be before life in these charming coastal fishing villages returns to normal. It is easy to ‘never’, or least for decades. But, this has not proved to be the case in other great disasters in Japan. It will be some time before normalcy returns to Sendai, but I am hoping for sooner than later. Right now the focus is on essentials such as the power grid and getting the arterioles reopened to supply the region. The details must wait. The roof of some platforms in Sendai station are collapsed. Only local trains are running. The freight yards near our house are idle. The subway runs four or so stations short of its length. The new branch lines under construction may get a much delayed opening. According to one source, the main bridge going into the northern part of the city (Izumi Chuo) is heavily damaged. Lots of roads have cracks, heaves, fissures etc. Because of fuel shortages, there seem to be few buses and no taxis. I drove downtown today and it was nearly empty in comparison to a normal day. Sendai International Airport was flooded by the tsunami and is now being used as a helicopter base at the exclusion of civilian carriers.


People who are wanting to leave the city and get out of the country are having to resort to a long, roundabout journey. First, they must go east through the mountains to Yamagata. And then south to Nigatta. From there the Shinkansen (Bullet Train) can take them to Tokyo. Another leg gets them to Narita and the airplanes out. This is a bus journey, unless you have your own private fuel stocks. One source said that there was line-up of 800 people waiting to board.


The hotels are closed, and a BBC TV crew were unable to find food, shelter or even vehicle rental. According to a Canadian friend who they wanted to interview live, the the police came and shooed them off — told them to hit the road. Apparently they did, and I saw them this evening in Yamagata interviewing some Welsh English teachers.


The behaviour of the Japanese people has been exemplary. I've seen no pushing or shoving or nasty behaviour. In recent hours, television has shown us much of the resilience and resolution of this nation, even in the most grievous circumstance. Foreign television may focus on the wreckage and never pan a lens on a large modern city which is under duress, but nevertheless intact — albeit with busted bridges and unusable train platforms. The intact parts have broken bits that add up to a lot. And yet, even the up-close CNN newstainment and bulletins of fresh disaster cannot describe the scale and poignancy of this disaster.


As the weekend approaches, a friend who is transiting in Los Angeles will try to fight his way back up here in a rented car. He lives here, but his wife has the keys to their apartment. And she is in a village with her parents some 50 Km from here with no heat, no food, no proper water supply. Rod will try to get here somehow despite gasoline rations and line ups. He will stay with us, and then we have to scheme a way to rescue these three people despite the apparently ruined roads. I don’t even know if we will be allowed to do it by the authorities.


In the meantime, the three of us have a rice cooker, an electric frying pan and some electric heat. Let's hope that is not taken away. Some of you down south — most notably Hugo and David — are going to experience grid blackouts due to shortage of supply. The control rods are in, the reactors are shut down, and skeleton crews (no pun intended) are fighting to cool of the residual heat in reactors that have run short of purified coolant. The sea water that is being used boils of as steam and produces a lot of H2. This has caused pressure in the containment buildings, and I believe not one but two have lost their heads. This has released some radioactivity [hoshasen] that may in the end prove to be not harmful to health. But there is uncertainty. And as a result, there has been vast concern and a massive evacuation of a twenty mile radius from the plant. This is some distance away from us, but not enough for easeful comfort. My mother in-law is not very concerned even though she and my brother-in-law’s family live in Fukushima City. Perhaps being bombed in Nagoya as a child puts such crises in another light. The prevailing winds have blown a lot of the nasty isotopes out to sea.


According to my wife, prime minister Kan paid an angry visit to the site to give Tokyo Electric a bit of stick. Here is a country that was on top of the world 20 years ago, and since then has come in third place as a contender in the race of capitalism with non-ending deflation and a flat lining economy. Much of Asia cannot be impressed at exploding nukes. Already, Vietnam has placed a quarantine protocol on Japanese food imports that may show up as radioactive.


I was in extreme high anxiety over all this nuke stuff until the local phone connections finally cleared and I got to talk to friends who had done some research. Friends with electric power and internet connections. This situation is not Chernobyl — not yet anyway. Chernobyl vaporised its fuel. That is very likely not going to happen this time, but China syndrome — at least in my feeble opinion — could, but probably won't.


BIG aftershock ... just now. More adrenaline. Can’t help it. Now it feels like we are rolling about on the sea. When I lived in Kanagawa, a friend on the floor above me used to vomit when this happened.


So that is where I will leave you except for some attached pics:


1)
Arahama as it got gutted and pushed up the inside of the dike. I was so heat-broken and I cried when I got home. My bike is on its side in the foreground. I cycled further towards the sea, but I was in such shock over the destruction, that I never thought to take a picture.
I've adored Arahama ever since I got here. And now it is a rotting ruin — gone for the most part. Some people are still missing.


2)
Same. Each community has a siren or some audible warning system. Some communities have an emergency drill for practiced evacuation. In this disaster, there was very little time between the quake and the arrival of the tsunami


3)
This is out in the tambo — the rice fields that are 400 years old. Here the houses were intact. Many of them appeared dry inside as they are raised up a bit off the land. Mud all over the place and the smell of salt water in the soil. In the picture, you can see the flooded land. And in the distance there is a column of smoke coming from a huge fire in Sendai Port. Some morons thought it was a good idea to build the gas works right in a tsunami threatened area.


4)
Kasumi aerodrome and Japanese Self-Defence Force helicopters. 100,000 force members are attending to this crisis along with foreign civilian contingents and help from the US armed forces. Today I saw two huge US CH-135 Chinook twin rotor helicopters flying in formation — on their way north. The Japanese use these draft horses too. The one in the pic are "Hueys" ... I think.


5)
Here I am standing on the dike road where I usually ride — or rode. I don’t think I can face seeing this again. The camera is looking over the alluvial land adjacent to the Natori River. In prior condition it was neatly tilled truck farming, or grasses and shrubs that screened pheasant and grouse. The tsunami rushed up the river towards the confluence of the Hirose river that goes through the centre of Sendai.


6)
Most buildings in Sendai survived OK, but not all. This is one of those 100 year old buildings in Kawara-machi near where I live in Shirahagi-machi. I went to check on a friend who is the proprietor of a hair salon opposite. Some other buildings were damaged there two.


My very warmest regards to all of you,


XXXXXXX


PS: Sorry, there may be mistakes in this letter. I am up too late for exhaustive editing.
PPS: XXXXXX, would you please forward this to XXXXXX



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Old 03-15-11, 08:31 PM
  #131  
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Thanks for posting the email. Hearing first person accounts makes all of this just that much more real even for those of us half a world away.
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Old 03-15-11, 08:57 PM
  #132  
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Originally Posted by cudak888
In comparison to most U.S. public transportation systems, that sort of performance after such a catastrophe is nothing short of a miracle. Unbelievable resilience.

-Kurt
Yeah, and it makes me think back to Katrina and New Orleans. We've sure got nothing to be proud of. Both technologically and socially.
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