moorey
call me Mia
Imagine how old YOU really are…youngy
Imagine how old YOU really are…youngy
At least now you know your silly straw house will stand up to some huff ‘n’ puffSure did. Nothing like some other areas seem to have felt. Woke both kids up though, and wife thought she was having a stroke.
Likely as old as I feel... everything aches these daze.Imagine how old YOU really are…
Our house is ancient and was creaking like a mofo... so much so, that I looked out the window, as I thought the recycle truck was buldozing the place.At least now you know your silly straw house will stand up to some huff ‘n’ puff
My house is brand new slab on ground with about 50 piles. Still shook like a mofo.Our house is ancient and was creaking like a mofo
You're allowed into Melb, just not allowed to go back regional hahaThis little gem came through my Farcebook feed this arv... "Can someone please explain how an earthquake from Mansfield was allowed to travel to Melbourne without a permit?"
Get a mod to remove it.Oops wrong thread
I totally missed it, reckon I was fixing some breaky for the kids at the time. Asked the kids if they noticed anything and they just looked at me blankly. Mrs was out in the car so she missed it too, feel like I got jibbed.Sure did. Nothing like some other areas seem to have felt. Woke both kids up though, and wife thought she was having a stroke.
Footnotes: the cracks in my ceilings don't seem to have grown, so that's a good thing.My house has been developing a few cracks (the joy of being built on an old swamp), so I'll see when I get home if they've grown.....
They need to pump few million tonnes of slick honey into the fault line, that'll get rid of the stiction and it'll move so buttery smooth that no-one will notice. Even the earth can benefit from improved small bump compliance.Footnotes: the cracks in my ceilings don't seem to have grown, so that's a good thing.
Had a chat with my mum a bit earlier this evening about it; she really digs this stuff & isn't freaked by it. It seems that the offending fault line, one of the bigger ones in the State and one that separates the Melbourne basin & surrounds from the "proper" high country is the bit that let go. Paradoxically, the major faults are often less frequently active, so when they do decide to move, they do it in a more obvious manner.
No they need to give the fault line a Kashima coating. It'll have a negligible performance improvement but it will improve the fault line's resale value.They need to pump few million tonnes of slick honey into the fault line, that'll get rid of the stiction and it'll move so buttery smooth that no-one will notice. Even the earth can benefit from improved small bump compliance.