Jumping the gun a bit ... Tomorrow morning is the 30th anniversary of the .

The main quake, a 6.7 on the Richter Scale, was at 4:31 AM PST. I started recording on the VCR at 4:41 AM, as soon as I could find a station on the air.

If you want to follow in real time in the morning, start this video at 4:41 AM PST / 7:41 AM EST.

youtube.com/watch?v=Rynddxc8kI

30 years ago this morning, we in Southern California were experiencing powerful aftershocks from the .

The main quake was at 4:31 AM PST, 6.7 on the Richter Scale.

I started recording as soon as I found KNBC-TV Channel 4 on the air.

This is the first six hours. I'll post the link for the afternoon hours later. (1/x)

youtube.com/watch?v=Rynddxc8kI

At the time, I was living in Santa Ana, about 40 miles from downtown Los Angeles and 65 miles from the epicenter. I was in bed, as were most of us, so I covered myself with pillows and rode it out.

If you live in quake country, be sure nothing is around your bed that can get airborne or fall on you. It's also a good idea to keep a pair of shoes and socks next to the bed so you don't have to walk on glass. (2/x)

Having trained as a first responder, after the main shaking stopped I grabbed a flashlight and went out to check my apartment complex. All was quiet. We didn't lose power. (3/x)

Later that morning, I went to work in Cypress, which was about 50 miles from Northridge. It was a three-story building. The first floor was fine. The second floor had a few items that fell. The third floor was a mess, including a broken water line. Any cabinets that weren't locked flew open and dumped their contents. We had cracks in the stairwell.

I brought my camcorder to document it all, but the battery was dead! Lesson learned. (4/x)

My supervisor let me go home around 10:30 AM PST so I could switch VCR tapes and record the afternoon's quake coverage. I'll post that later.

I'll also post later a History Channel two-hour program from 1997 that looked back at the quake and its aftermath. (5/x)

My personal "uh oh" was when I saw this on TV. I did a one-year internship in 1984-85 with the City of Anaheim. One of my projects was a new scoreboard.

The Angels wanted the board mounted on the overhang. The architects said no, the overhang can't hold the weight. I left before it was resolved, but clearly the Angels got their way.

When I saw this on TV, I contacted some news reporter friends and told them there's a memo somewhere documenting "We told you so." It eventually surfaced. (6/x)

Follow

A reminder that if you want to relive the 1994 in real time, start this video at 4:41 AM PST/7:41 AM EST.

youtube.com/watch?v=Rynddxc8kI

Was just reminded of the 1987 Whittier Narrows quake, a 5.9 at 7:42 AM. I was at work in Irvine.

My employer had designated two managers as our emergency response leads. Both panicked and did the opposite of what they were supposed to do. One ran to the window to look outside. The other ran past him through the glass doors to the parking lot.

I braced myself in a door jamb. If I'd been at my desk, I would have dived under the desk.

A woman in our city had a heart attack and died.

"The rapid ability to collect and analyze the information enables the USGS to disseminate information about quakes faster than the most powerful tremors spread through the ground. The USGS now manages ShakeAlert, an earthquake early warning system designed to give people on the West Coast notice of when a moderate to strong quake hits nearby."

latimes.com/california/story/2

"Walls bend. Refrigerators walk. Televisions fly. I learned all this and more 30 years ago today, when I was jolted awake at 4:31 a.m. by the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake."

latimes.com/california/story/2

Our live real-time replay of coverage 30 years ago continues. Start this video at 10:45 AM PST / 1:45 PM EST for eight more hours of coverage.

By nightfall, local TV news helicopters were being pressed into service as medical evacuation flights.

youtube.com/watch?v=-h-WMn9xaR

Concluding our coverage of the 30th anniversary ...

This is a two-hour 1997 History Channel documentary on the quake. For those who don't want to watch all the live coverage, this is the "Cliff Notes" version.

youtube.com/watch?v=eODSt07MU0

@WordsmithFL Oh yeah. My step parent’s old Zenith (which was one of those old fashioned ones with a wooden cabinet and matching speakers) actually walked across the living room. They weren’t that far from the epicenter.

@WordsmithFL me youngest son was living in Northridge and woke up when his bed moved violently. He was in the Coast Guard assigned to a buoy tender. When I heard the news, I was afraid for his safety, but he called at around 6 to tell us he was all right. It was pre-cellphone days.

@tirebiter73 I had a writer friend who lived about a mile from the epicenter. He was without power for days. I drove up about ten days later to bring him my VHS tape to watch. It was fascinating seeing his delayed reaction to all that had happened around him without his knowledge.

We then went to a local bookstore we frequented and helped them clean up.

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