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#225066 - 06/02/11 09:01 PM The hard way or the easy way?
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA

Say there's been a major earthquake and you want to get home to your family ASAP, about 80 miles away.

You were driving on the Interstate at the time and the overpass ahead of you collapsed, totally blocking the road.

The overpass isn't one with onramps and offramps.

There aren't many routes from where you are to where you want to go. There's a medium-sized river ahead of you, and the Interstate has the only bridge over it for quite a ways. If you go back to the last offramp, there are still no guarantees that you will be able to get around the fallen trees, buildings, debris, downed power lines, etc. The Interstate is your main chance for use of a vehicle, otherwise you'll be on foot.

Then you hear a shout and there's a man standing on top of the pile of concrete rubble in front of you. You want to go south. He wants to go north.

You're thinking that by sticking to the freeway and driving up the offramps and back down the onramps (where available), you might be able to get nearly home, or at least closer, before you had to continue on foot.

Aftershocks are continuing.

You're driving a 5-year-old Toyota.

Would you trade cars with him and take your chances that you could get through?

What if you were driving your new Mercedes?

Sue

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#225068 - 06/02/11 09:16 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
Teslinhiker Offline
Veteran

Registered: 12/14/09
Posts: 1419
Loc: Nothern Ontario
Interesting questions...

I would think that trading cars may be feasible, but would I give up a Mercedes? That is very difficult to say as a 5 year old Toyota is probably worth 20% of a new base model Mercedes. In all reality and based on the scenario of an interstate highway, any vehicle is not going to get very far due to all the other traffic now backed up all around you. At this point, I would find the closest and hopefully safest spot to park the car and start looking for alternate transport even if that meant a very long, difficult multi-day walk...however that rules out getting home asap. Something to ponder over and see what others here think.
_________________________
Earth and sky, woods and fields, lakes and rivers, the mountain and the sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.

John Lubbock

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#225075 - 06/02/11 10:12 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
bsmith Offline
day hiker
Addict

Registered: 02/15/07
Posts: 590
Loc: ventura county, ca
a person averages 2.5 miles per hour walking on flat terrain. be home in 32 hours, all things considered.

is the river bridge intact?

are there other bridges ahead of you that may also be down?

probably unknown.

in this scenario i'd go with the known - walking - as i feel giving your car to a stranger is fraught many issues. all you need is some law enforcement official to ask to see your insurance and registration. "well, we swapped cars, officer."

depends on how soon you need / want to be home.

for me, i looked closely at this issue several years ago and rerouted my way home, knowing full well that here in so cal the bridges will fall in THE BIG ONE and everyone else will be on the blocked roads too.

a bicycle is stored at work for the hope-it-never-happens ride home. i won't even consider driving. too many bridges and a couple of semi-wet, but crossable if needed, rivers between me and home.

great mind challenge!
_________________________
“Everyone should have a horse. It is a great way to store meat without refrigeration. Just don’t ever get on one.”
- ponder's dad

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#225078 - 06/02/11 10:48 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: bsmith]
hikermor Offline
Geezer in Chief
Geezer

Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
While damage at or near the epicenter of a quake will be quite heavy, depending upon its intensity, the ill effects of the quake taper off remarkably as you move away from the epicenter. A distance of fifty miles can make quite a difference in terms of a dinged up infrastructure.

I would get out a map(s) and look at alternative, circuitous routes that would bring me to my objective, all the while listening to news sources to get some idea of where the major damage has occurred.

The long way around may be the short way home.

Of course, trading cars would be quite feasible for me - anyone interested in a 1992 van? only 178,000 easy miles accumulated while driving to soccer practice....
_________________________
Geezer in Chief

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#225080 - 06/02/11 11:42 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
LesSnyder Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 07/11/10
Posts: 1680
Loc: New Port Richey, Fla
exchange identification (picture on phone)...keep your respective titles , sign mutual letters of exchange describing the conditions leading to the exchange, and for a specified period of time.....if defaulted seek legal help

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#225113 - 06/03/11 02:26 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
Mark_F Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 06/24/09
Posts: 714
Loc: Kentucky
Easy decision for me at this point.

I need to get home to my family ASAP. And a mercedes is not even close to a reality for me. Even if it was, I would like to think getting to my family is more important than the mercedes.

In any event, swap as much info as possible (names, addresses, phone numbers, etc), maybe consider swapping credit cards as a sign of good faith that after things settle down you'll contact each other again and swap vehicles and cards back. Maybe not such a good idea though if they give you their maxed out $200 limit card in exchange for your $5,000 limit card with no current balance. In this situation, I imagine I would do whatever it takes to get back on the road, though.

I am not really a material guy as you might have noticed. I like to think that after the fact, I could accept losing some material goods as long as me and mine are safe.
_________________________
Uh ... does anyone have a match?

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#225114 - 06/03/11 02:32 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
Mark_F Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 06/24/09
Posts: 714
Loc: Kentucky
Originally Posted By: Susan

Say there's been a major earthquake and you want to get home to your family ASAP, about 80 miles away.


oops, misread the premise. big difference between "want" and "need." The particulars of the situation would further dictate my course of action.

Have I lost contact with loved ones? Cell phones down? No service?

Simply wanting to get home doesn't mean I have to get home. Without an urgent need to get home ASAP I'd probably take a detour, look for alternate routes, or hunker down where I am until the road is clear.
_________________________
Uh ... does anyone have a match?

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#225115 - 06/03/11 02:37 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
Jeanette_Isabelle Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/13/06
Posts: 2986
Loc: Nacogdoches, Texas
I would stick with my vehicle since it has gear I could use. Where I live, we have multiple alternate routes so I would go out of my way. It may take a while but I will find my way out of this maze.

Jeanette Isabelle
_________________________
I'm not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism. -- Wednesday Adams, Wednesday

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#225124 - 06/03/11 04:10 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: Susan]
MDinana Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 03/08/07
Posts: 2208
Loc: Beer&Cheese country
I think we can all agree that an overpass goes over something, right? Typically, that means some sort of supporting structure. Almost always that's some sort of packed earth, at some point in the overpass's support. So I'd just drive my truck up and over the little hill formed by the dirt. it might take some honking to get through if there's traffic backed up on that cross street (which I assume, since apparently their road/overpass collapsed)

I wouldn't give my truck up. It's got too much gear I could use.

Time to pull out the map and look for service roads, railroad right of ways, etc. With a 4x4, I've got options...


Edited by MDinana (06/03/11 04:12 PM)

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#225729 - 06/11/11 10:57 PM Re: The hard way or the easy way? [Re: MDinana]
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
Quote:
So I'd just drive my truck up and over the little hill formed by the dirt.


I drive a 4WD for work, and it is exactly lack of that particular choice that has me stalled. Here in the PNW, miles of the sides of the freeways are lined with thick, deep, tangled blackberry vines. Most areas appear to be old stands, probably six feet high. When the word impenetrable was invented, the person was probably looking at wild blackberries.

After blackberries, the freeways are mainly edged with stands of Douglas fir and alder, and you're not going ten feet through it even with a 4WD VW. And there are many freeway edges with concrete walls (even low ones) to direct runoff and eroded soil and debris from our heavy rainfall.

The other part of what I was thinking was: if the way ahead might be clear for multiple miles, and trading cars or walking were the two most viable choices, what's the difference between abandoning your vehicle at the edge of the freeway, and trading it with someone? How about in rain or snow or low temps?

Even in a bad quake, I doubt that all the overpasses will go down, and with most of those with exits, you could go up the exit ramp and then back down the entrance ramp. Even if available only part of the way, the freeways are still probably going to be the best way to travel. The side roads aren't going to be pristine: fallen trees, fallen power poles, collapsed buildings, power lines across the roads, abandoned vehicles, etc.

If it's a bad quake and multiple (not all) overpasses are down, it's probably going to be a long time before you will be able to get back to your vehicle. What shape will it be in by then? (This being America rather than Japan.)

Did you trade 15-20 miles on foot due to distrust of a stranger for a car that ended up being stripped, trashed, set on fire or cannibalized? Harking back to the thread on scavenging a car, keep in mind that most people will probably be quicker to cannibalize an abandoned car than their own. New tires? Your car ain't got no more stinking tires!

Quote:
a person averages 2.5 miles per hour walking on flat terrain. be home in 32 hours, all things considered.


No, I can guarantee THAT'S not going to happen! I meant 80 miles as the parrot flies, and not under everyday, ideal conditions on pristine pavement, an easy stroll from Point A to Point B on a nice day with every other person handing you a sandwich and cold drink.

Eighty miles after a major quake could probably take three or four times that in actual traveled distance. You're going to be climbing over debris, hiking around totally destroyed areas, backtracking, avoiding stuff still falling with every aftershock, etc. There isn't likely to be even 50 feet in a straight line.

OH! Got a nail through your shoe and into your foot? Sprained your ankle? Hmmm.... your best-case scenario is deteriorating a bit, isn't it? How long is it going to take to get home NOW?

People need to realize that they can probably take the best-case disaster circumstances just fine, esp the people here at ETS.

It's the worst-case scenarios that throw you the real curves. Try something like this:
* A widespread 9.2 earthquake (Anchorage, 1964) hits your area,
* You're not at home,
* Your SO is just home from surgery,
* In the dark,
* In midwinter, with freezing rain,
* You're traveling with a co-worker (in her car) who thinks being prepared is having a double latte in the cup holder,
* One or both of you are injured,
* The car is low on gas,
* Your car just got two flat tires from debris,
* Both of you are wearing dress shoes (co-worker is wearing 4" spike heels).

Your problems just increased exponentially, didn't they?

Sue

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