Do Seattlites worry about rising ocean tides?
I'm moving to the area for good sometime this year. We have small kids and plan to keep our house until they're grown and gone. So, I'm wondering if I should hesitate to buy anything near water (!) for fear of global warming floods. Is this an issue people worry about in Washington state?
Comments
The next major earthquake, however, is a different story. I've watched all of the TV specials over the past ten years on PNW earthquakes, and the last 'big one' occurred in 1700 and affected the coast from Northern CA all the way up to Canada (causing tidal waves in Japan). Land in some places dropped 10-20 feet--where this happened on the water's edge, well, your three-story view house could become a one-story with a two-level deep-water pool (RE ad: scuba dive in your own basement)!
My own take is that over the long term, you're better off one block from the water, as eventually you will be at water's edge.
We know St. Helens is active. But Rainier could also be disastrous if it blew. Supposedly, a large portion of the south king county landscape was formed by an eruption about 500 years ago. I heard the hot mud flow went all the way up to Lake Washington.
So, if you want to worry about something, focus on things which would be relatively sudden and definitely deadly. Don't even fret with global warming raising sea levels 1/2" a year.
We also have the 'mock' black widow which looks like a real one but lacks the red hourglass on the underside of the body, as well as the poisonous bite. I grew up in Eastern WA where we had the real thing and it always creeps me out when I see one of the mock ones--in fact I was cleaning up in our R&D lab at work tonight and I found a very live one!
Does anyone (structural engineers) know if current building standards have to account for a change in water table due to a potential rise in sea level?