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Friday, March 11, 2011

Brief Chat With a Friend in Nagoya, Japan

Posted by on Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 6:13 AM

My friend Bryan Stokley teaches English in Nagoya. He's not an earthquake expert or anything, but he's the only person I know in Japan. I'm taking him up on his offer to put me in touch with people from Tokyo, but for now I'm gonna try to go back to sleep.

Were you anywhere near that business?

Not the massive tsunamis, but definitely had quite a scare.

How far were you from the epicenter?

I'm in Nagoya, it's centrally located on the main island and about 450 miles or so from Sendai, the epicenter.

How significant were the effects in Nagoya?

Minimal, just a lot of shaking. good 25 to 30 seconds. I can put you in touch with people in Tokyo if you'd like. It was a lot more intense there.

Describe the mood over there. How frequent are earthquakes in the area?

They are pretty frequent but always short, never that intense or long. people here develop kind of a false sense of security because they think they are so well prepared. I think the majority of people are pretty shocked. It certainly doesn't help the morale of the country. They're already pretty distraught over all of the social and economic ills they're facing.

If I heard correctly, this is the biggest quake in Japan's recorded history. When is was the last major quake, and how does this compare?

The last one of this kind of magnitude was the kobe earthquake in 1995. It was like 6.8 or something. Lots of people died, so it was kind of a wake up call to Japan to reevaluate their construction practices so as to prevent anything of that magnitude from happening again. if you mention earthquakes here everyone immediately talks about the Kobe earthquake. This will rank up there as a significant earthquake globally and nationally. Right now everyone's in WTF Just Happened Mode. trains, planes buses etc are stopped. People are walking back home like after September 11th.

How widespread is ground transit disruption?

I think it's all fucked from Tokyo and moving north up to Sendai. It's hard to get a connection even here cause everyone's using their phones.

What time did the quake hit, and what time is it now?

It's 10:13 pm here. It hit around 2:40 in the afternoon. Nice spring day, sunny

Have you talked to anyone in Tokyo?

Yeah, a lot of people are using Facebook to post updates and communicate.

How has internet service in your area or Tokyo been affected?

Internet seems okay, but phones were pretty messed up earlier.

It's 5:26 am here, and I'm sitting at my desk in my underwear because I can't sleep. Also, I can't find my glasses. Anything else I should be asking?

I dunno. I wish could help. The Christchurch thing is interesting. A lot of japanese kids died and then they come back home and get hit again. It's definitely gonna affect the morale of the country which as I said is at an all-time low. I haven't talked to an optimistic Japanese person in like 3 years.

Sounds grim. Maybe this will make people rally?

its possible. They're good at that kind of thing. I think they can take solace in the fact that they were much more prepared this time and that helped minimize the loss of life.

 

Comments (10) RSS

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Canuck 1
Thanks, Grant, for making me think "better at the desk than under it," and then feeling guilty because this earthquake/tsunami is so horrifying and it's nothing to joke about...starting the day with sadness and guilt...
Posted by Canuck on March 11, 2011 at 6:22 AM
2
Just got an email from a friend in Sapporo on the northern island of Hokkaido, a few hundred miles from the epicenter. He said after three aftershocks, he went home to be with his kids. For a sense of scale, that'd be like an earthquake in Seattle being strong enough to shake you in Spokane.
Posted by Smartypants on March 11, 2011 at 6:40 AM
Fifty-Two-Eighty 3
Thanks for the update. There are reports of 300 dead just in Sendai. This was a bad one.
Posted by Fifty-Two-Eighty http://www.nra.org on March 11, 2011 at 7:14 AM
angel in indy 4
Checked in with my cousin on Facebook this am. She's at a navy base near Tokyo. One of her kids was at a school on a different base. All ok, lots of shaking, but I think her kid's stuck at the other base for now.
Posted by angel in indy on March 11, 2011 at 7:31 AM
Enigma 5
Two of my friends were on their way to Hong Kong and had a connection in Japan, I believe Tokyo, just before the quake. I think everyone stranded at the airport has been taken to a military base for safety- at least they were.
Posted by Enigma http://washingtonunitedformarriage.org/ on March 11, 2011 at 8:09 AM
6
I lived in Naka-cho (between Nagoya and Gifu) for many years...it seemed the earthquakes were daily and you do develop a false sense of security because they are usually non destructive "rock and rollers"...My heart and prayers go out to to my friends, family and the beautiful people and spirit that is Japan.....my tears will not stop falling until you are whole again...Heaven's choicest blessing be with you for comfort.
Posted by jodyb on March 11, 2011 at 2:10 PM
7
Thanks Grant! I have several friends teaching English in Tokyo & one on a business trip-- I forwarded it to him. :D
Posted by roadpoo on March 11, 2011 at 5:52 PM
8
I am at an African restaurant in Portland waiting to play upright bass in a jazz trio headed by pianist who is from Nagoya. Very relieved that his home town was spared--thanks for this info.
David
Posted by Rosey on March 11, 2011 at 6:17 PM
9
I am trying to search for family in Nagoya, Japan. Is there someone that you can put me in touch with. I am in the United States and unable to contact them via phone. If someone can help, please let me know.
Posted by may02363@yahoo.com on March 14, 2011 at 2:08 PM
10
Hello Mr. Stokley, We are trying to locate a woman who worked for us in 1952. We were stationed in Matsushima Army base in Yamoto, Japan. She moved to Nagoya in 1953 when she was married. Her married name is Tomio Oi & we wondered if you could suggest the best way to locate her.
Thank you for your help with this, it means a lot to our family.
Sincerely,
Winifred

Posted by winifred on January 26, 2012 at 12:50 PM

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