tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7956489623554999361.post3714113939597899540..comments2024-03-20T06:04:22.978-04:00Comments on The Venice Experience: Keeping up with the news: Another terremoto this morningkarenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02387141835879842596noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7956489623554999361.post-18189375435863585602013-06-23T17:00:23.302-04:002013-06-23T17:00:23.302-04:00Wow, Karen. I had heard nothing about earthquakes...Wow, Karen. I had heard nothing about earthquakes in Italy. Guess that because no one was killed. The old adage of the news "If it bleeds, it leads" in force here I guess. <br />I felt earthquakes twice in Chicago. One when we were living in the suburbs -- my husband was in LA and I was the one in an earthquake. I didn't know what it was at first, thinking a rather large truck had gone by behind our house, but then knew it wasn't that.<br />The second time I was seated at our dining room table, reading a book. I felt like something moved behind me (our China hutch was behind me). Then I glanced at our hi-rise window and saw the glass move in the rubber boot. <br />No damage, either time but kind of strange just the same. Both times the quake was located several hundreds of miles south of Chicago in the Morris fault which, if it weren't in farmland, some say that it would be a more dangerous earthquake region than the San Andreas Fault in San Francisco.<br />Stay safe!Diannehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08249874735043959774noreply@blogger.com