At the epicenter
Greg Risling
Jason Kraft was rustled from his sleeping bag early Saturday morning,
awakened by a reverberating sound through the desert floor that grew
closer with every second.
Excited but uncertain that what he was feeling was a massive earthquake,
the 15-year-old Newport Harbor High School student went outside in the
dead of night and stumbled toward a cliff.
Above Kraft’s head was a gigantic boulder teetering at the cliff’s edge.
His eyes were transfixed on the rock, but it didn’t budge.
“It must have weighed a couple of tons,” he recalled. “I was watching to
see if it would plummet to the ground. Luckily, it didn’t.”
Kraft and 17 other Newport Harbor students were camping in a nature
preserve only 25 miles from the epicenter of Saturday morning’s Hector
Mine earthquake. The magnitude 7.1 temblor did little damage because of
its remote location in the Mojave Desert.
The students, who were accompanied by chaperons, were in the area
learning more about the desert terrain when the earthquake shook them
from their sleep.
Lilly Lopez, 17, broke into tears when she realized there was a quake
rumbling beneath her. Terrified of earthquakes, Lopez let out a
bloodcurdling scream that awoke several other campers.
“I was so scared at first,” she said. “But then I realized how safe we
really were. I’d much rather be out there in the desert rather than in a
building.”
Biology teacher Scott Smith, who led the expedition, said he was
concerned about falling debris that echoed through the canyon after the
quake. They couldn’t see the rocks falling from above, but the noise was
nerve-racking.
“It sounded like a stampede or a freight train barreling through the
area,” he said. “It was pure earth moving along. It was an odd feeling
because there was nowhere to go. You just sit there, feel it and ride it
out.”
The students who traveled to the desert for the three-day trip are
members of the school’s Environmental Studies Club. Smith leads the club
on three trips during the school year, including trips to Yosemite and
Big Sur.
Smith had an active schedule planned for the students before the quake
struck. They went rock climbing in Joshua Tree and examined the wildlife
around the Granite Mountains, located 60 miles south of Baker.
But a trip to Mitchell Caverns to study rock formations was canceled
because it was closed.
Instead, the group were able to examine some of the quake’s damage,
including a train that was derailed and some severe cracks on freeway
overpasses.
“We figured we should take advantage of the situation,” Smith said. “This
doesn’t happen that often. Plus, the quake made this a very memorable
trip.”
Both Lopez and Kraft said they have experienced earthquakes before, but
never the magnitude of Saturday’s temblor. They still had mixed emotions
two days after the event.
“It was thrilling, but freaky and scary at the same time,” Lopez said.
“To think we were so close to the epicenter is amazing. It’s something I
will never forget.”
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