|
Post by DazaB_WCFC on Feb 27, 2008 1:17:29 GMT
Anyone else feel it? I did I did!
|
|
|
Post by coops on Feb 27, 2008 6:38:23 GMT
Certainly did. I was at work (still am in fact) walking back from the tea machine when everything started rattling.
My wife said our cat woke her up because it was on the prowl a couple of minutes before it happened so it must have sensed something.
This one didn't feel as bad as the Dudley one a few years back but we were only three miles from the epicentre of that one!
|
|
|
Post by ambersalamander on Feb 28, 2008 20:53:35 GMT
When was this?
|
|
|
Post by DazaB_WCFC on Feb 28, 2008 22:27:38 GMT
Around 1am, yesterday morning (Wednesday)
|
|
|
Post by ambersalamander on Feb 28, 2008 22:41:29 GMT
I was either asleep or on the phone...hmmm.
|
|
|
Post by amberaleman on Feb 28, 2008 22:50:20 GMT
I was either asleep or on the phone...hmmm. Obviously the earth didn't move for you! I slept through it too. ;D But the quake was certainly felt in London - one of my colleagues, who lives in NW London, was terrified by it and couldn't get to sleep afterwards.
|
|
|
Post by medibot on Feb 29, 2008 6:20:29 GMT
Felt sod all in Brighton but then i suppose you couldn't get further away.
Why on earth it would prevent somebody from going back to sleep though is beyond me.
|
|
|
Post by bh on Feb 29, 2008 21:48:45 GMT
The lads at work on nights, Waterloo (London) said they felt it!! I was a kip, and missed it!
|
|
|
Post by ambersalamander on Mar 2, 2008 16:44:08 GMT
Felt sod all in Brighton but then i suppose you couldn't get further away. Why on earth it would prevent somebody from going back to sleep though is beyond me. Not me. I've been known to be unable to get back to sleep after being freaked out by a thunderstorm.
|
|