NEIGHBORS READY!
  • Home
  • Family Prep
    • Go Bags
    • Stay Informed
    • Emergency Plan
    • Water Supplies
    • Sanitation and Hygiene
    • Plan Food
    • Home Hazards
    • First Aid Plan
  • Community Prep
    • Neighborhood Prep
    • Be 2 Weeks Ready
    • Emergency Comms
    • Evacuation & Assembly
    • Community Caches
    • Training Opportunities
  • News & Events
    • News Topics
    • Ready! News
    • Our Events
  • Hazards
    • Home Fires
    • Wildfires
    • Earthquakes
    • Tsunamis
  • Resources
    • QuakeUp! NW
    • Oregon.gov
    • Washington County Prep
    • Beaverton Emergency Mgmt
    • Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue
    • CDC
    • FEMA
    • Ready.gov
    • Red Cross
  • About Us
  • Contact
    • Email Us
    • Newsletter Signup
    • Volunteer
  • Home
  • Family Prep
    • Go Bags
    • Stay Informed
    • Emergency Plan
    • Water Supplies
    • Sanitation and Hygiene
    • Plan Food
    • Home Hazards
    • First Aid Plan
  • Community Prep
    • Neighborhood Prep
    • Be 2 Weeks Ready
    • Emergency Comms
    • Evacuation & Assembly
    • Community Caches
    • Training Opportunities
  • News & Events
    • News Topics
    • Ready! News
    • Our Events
  • Hazards
    • Home Fires
    • Wildfires
    • Earthquakes
    • Tsunamis
  • Resources
    • QuakeUp! NW
    • Oregon.gov
    • Washington County Prep
    • Beaverton Emergency Mgmt
    • Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue
    • CDC
    • FEMA
    • Ready.gov
    • Red Cross
  • About Us
  • Contact
    • Email Us
    • Newsletter Signup
    • Volunteer
Picture
Go to Blog Index

International ShakeOut Drill 2025

10/16/2025

0 Comments

 
This year's International ShakeOut Day was October 16, when millions of people worldwide participated in earthquake drills at work, school, or home.  If you missed the opportunity to do the drill on October 16th, you can register your ShakeOut drill for any day of the year, and drill at a time of your choice. Neighbors Ready! leaders took a few moments out to participate, and they shared how they engaged their families, communities and pets to practice earthquake safety in photos. 

What would you do if an earthquake struck right now? Do you know how to protect yourself? Check out our Earthquake Preparedness page to learn more and get prepared!
Picture
Drop, Cover, and Hold On! Tania Tyrrell demonstrates how its done during ShakeOut 2025 in Beaverton Oregon

Many of us were in our kitchens at the time when we felt the fake rumbles of the earthquake drill. We sought shelter under our kitchen tables, alone or with our pets. Some were at church, and crawled under the pews for protection. And some were at work, and crawled under their desk for temporary shelter during the drill. What would you do if an earthquake struck right now? Do you know? 
0 Comments

Be Geo-Hazard Smart: Aware & Prepared

2/25/2024

1 Comment

 
If you attended the "Be Geo-Hazard Smart: Aware & Prepared," on Sunday, Feb 25th, you likely came away with a much better understanding of the local earthquake hazards in the Beaverton and Portland area, and what to do to protect your family and home. We had two speakers: Aaron Fox, a noted geologist and top-notch emergency manager, and Rick Eilers, President of Prepared Northwest, Inc. This article highlights some of the key learnings and provides links for you to continue learning about geo-hazards and residential seismic retrofits.
Picture
Aaron Fox, our first speaker, a geologist and emergency manager, generously shares his expertise to a full house
ReaD More

Read More
1 Comment

How to find Earthquake Faults in Your Area

1/1/2024

0 Comments

 
Could it happen here? On New Year's Day, the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center detected a magnitude 7.5 earthquake near the west coast of Honshu, Japan. Nearly 100,000 were ordered to evacuate. I was staying with friends in Gearhart, on the Oregon Coast. We wondered if we might be in danger of a tsunami. Fortunately, we were spared this time. 
It's always a good idea to be prepared for natural disasters by informing yourself and taking simple steps to have supplies ready to go. When at the coast, look for and practice walking the tsunami routes in areas where you are staying.
What about when your home? Find out where the fault lines lie in your area, using this interactive map by the U.S. Geological Survey. And prepare for all kinds of disasters using the information on this website. 
Picture
Picture
To find fault lines in your area, click the image to open the USGS interactive map.

Author

Karen Ronning-Hall, Disaster Preparedness Evangelist, living in beautiful Portland, Oregon, with hubby Bill, daughter Geneva, Bean dog, Thumper kitty, and Terry the turtle.

0 Comments

ShakeOut! At the Beach & Elsewhere

10/26/2023

1 Comment

 
What do you do if a mega earthquake happens and you are at the beach? Run for the hills, right?! Knowing what to do, and actually doing it are two separate things, and that's why practice is so important. 
During the International ShakeOut! exercise, I participated in a tsunami drill with the South Tillamook County CERT team. I met new people and learned the routes to two tsunami assembly areas in Neskowin, Oregon. 
If you spend time at the beach, consider walking the evacuation routes as a practice; note how much time it takes you to vigorously walk to high ground. 
Picture
When at the beach, practice walking to your Tsunami Assembly Area.
Read More

Read More
1 Comment

ShakeOut! What to do in an Earthquake

10/8/2023

0 Comments

 
Not sure what to do during an earthquake? On International ShakeOut Day, which happens in October annually, millions of people worldwide participate in earthquake drills at work, school, or home! You don't have to wait until October to practice earthquake safety!
Check out the videos at 
Great ShakeOut Earthquake Drills.  These  videos include information on what to do during an earthquake to protect yourself if: 
  • You have a mobility disability
  • You are in bed
  • You are in your car
  • You are in a stadium or theatre
  • And more! ​ ​
For more information, check out www.shakeout.org.
0 Comments

Which Beaverton schools are safe during an earthquake?

3/11/2023

0 Comments

 
In the mid-1990s the Beaverton School District (BSD) ​conducted a district-wide investigation of the seismic stability of its schools and subsequently began a targeted program to seismically upgrade and improve them. 
Picture
Click to go to BSD's Emergency Preparedness Webpage
It's Earthquake Preparedness webpage states, "Because of our community's generous support of the 2014 and 2020 Bonds, the district has built several new schools and seismically upgraded others." These bonds provided the District a unique opportunity to not only address daily operational needs, but also respond to the findings of The Oregon Resilience Plan by constructing disaster resilient schools that are also capable of supporting their surrounding communities as emergency shelters. ​
Read More

Read More
0 Comments

What to do when the next megaquake happens

3/10/2023

0 Comments

 
Most of us have been taught that in an earthquake, we should drop, cover, and hold on. Chris Goldfinger, Professor of Marine Geology and Oregon State University (OSU), challenges this advice in a PBS program that aired on Oct 18, 2022. He suggests your response could vary depending on how much warning you have before the violent shaking starts and what type of building you are in when the quake hits. Continue reading to learn more and watch the 12-minute video. 
Picture
Chris Goldfinger offers new perspectives on what to do when a megaquake happens
Continue Reading

Read More
0 Comments

Earthquake Regional Impact Analysis

12/29/2022

1 Comment

 
What's the risk of being unprepared for a major earthquake for people living in the Portland Oregon metropolitan area? What kind of losses and damage might occur? To answer these questions, the Regional  Disaster Preparedness Organization (RDPO) partnered with the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) to create a report describing potential impacts to Clackamas, Multnomah, and Washington counties from earthquakes, including a magnitude 9.0+ Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake. 
The report provides damage and casualty estimates to buildings, people, and key infrastructure sectors resulting from a major earthquake in the Portland metropolitan region. The study’s estimates of injuries and fatalities, building damages, and other impacts helps communities, the region, and the state better prepare for, respond to, and recover from major earthquakes. 
Check out the 10-minute video to get a quick overview, or click on the images to get a summary of the impacts or read the full report. 
Picture
Click image for the full report.
Picture
Click the image to get a summary of the impact estimates.
Picture
Click image to access an interactive map and discover hazards in your neighborhood in Oregon.
1 Comment

Unprepared: An Oregon Field Guide Special

11/23/2022

0 Comments

 
Oregon Field Guide spent a year-and-a-half probing the state of Oregon's preparedness, and found that when it comes to bridges, schools, hospitals, building codes, and energy infrastructure, Oregon lags far behind many quake prone regions of the country. Check out this informative 1-hour video. (Aired September 30, 2015.)
Picture
Click image to play the video
0 Comments

Is it always a good idea to drop cover & hold on?

10/24/2022

0 Comments

 
Did you practice your drop-cover-hold skills in last week's Shake Out earthquake drill? That’s a great survival strategy to use during an earthquake in many homes and seismically stable structures. In other less stable structures around Portland, it may be safer to evacuate. Check out this PBS report to learn why.”
0 Comments

Shake Out! Earthquake Drill - Lessons Learned

10/20/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
Did you practice your drop-cover-hold skills during the International Shake Out Earthquake Drill? My family did and as usual, we had fun and learned lessons.
In our practice, we follow the drill suggestions on the Oregon Shake Out website. When the drill started, we dropped to the floor, found the nearest place to cover ourselves (in our case, under our kitchen table), and then held on for a few minutes, as if waiting out a major shake. (You can practice this drill at any time.) While we waited, we looked around and imaged how an earthquake might create damage and hazards: what could drop off counters and shelves and off the walls. Making notes of these observations will help us better secure our house for a future earthquake.
After a few minutes (in a real earthquake, after the shaking stops), we practice our neighborhood ready drill, which includes going through the 9 steps to take after the disaster for an earthquake. I keep the list of the 9 steps in my under-bed-kit and also on the refrigerator to make it easy to find. 
Preparing with neighbors makes you more resilient and increases everyone's chances of survival. Once you have taken care of your family, secured your house, its time to make sure that your neighbors are ok and secure the neighborhood. They will do the same for you, assuming your have met with them ahead of time in a Neighborhood Ready! meeting. (Hint, hint!) After an earthquake, you assemble at a predetermined place, form teams to check to make sure everybody is OK, check everybody's gas meters, and shut the gas meters off, if there is evidence of a leak.
​Here's what we learned during our 2022 drill: 
Lessons learned during our home check: 
  • We had fun getting on our gear, going through our checklist, and checking on neighbors (as a pair). Many people were not home, but of the few we made contact with, they were appreciative. :) 
  • We discovered one of our under-bed kits was not easily accessible, and one had some items that were falling apart and needed replacement. I didn't realize my gloves were coming apart; I discovered that by putting them on. 
  • We spend a lot of time in our family room, and we don't have a lot of emergency supplies in there. Our family room is a wall of windows, and I don't always keep shoes in there! Time to add a box of critical safety gear in the family room. 
  • One of us had trouble getting under the table due to knee trouble. Some vulnerable seniors may have the same issue. If you are in this group, it's a good idea to practice alternative safety steps, like using a pillow to protect your head during the earthquake, especially if its hard to get on hands and knees to get under a table. 
  • We had moved our fire extinguisher, and couldn't find it right away! Need to have a consistent place for the fire extinguisher. 
  • My HAM radio got into a mode that I couldn't figure out right away. I had to troubleshoot the problem. I need more practice! 
Lessons learned during neighborhood checks: 
  • Lots of people weren't home when we did our home checks. We remembered that we should be checking their gas meter, anyway. Whatever team goes out to check on the gas needs to carry an all-in-one tool. 
  • We need to have a backup to our neighborhood safe meeting place. For the second year in a row, the person who hosts our neighborhood meeting place was out of town during Shake Out. That could happen in a real earthquake, so we need to have a better backup. 
What lessons did you learn? Share in the comments below. :) 

Picture

Author

Karen Ronning-Hall, Disaster Preparedness Evangelist, living in beautiful Portland, Oregon, with hubby Bill, daughter Geneva, Bean dog, Thumper kitty, and Terry the turtle.

0 Comments

    Author

    Write something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview.

    Archives

    November 2025
    October 2025
    June 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    July 2024
    April 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    November 2023
    October 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022

    Categories

    All
    Climate Prep
    Community Prep
    Earthquake Prep
    Emergency Comms
    Events & Training
    Family & Personal Prep
    Fire Safety
    Food Prep
    Go Bags & Evacuation
    Sanitation & Hygiene

    RSS Feed


Contact Us
​About Us
Picture
Picture
© Neighbors Ready! 2025. All rights reserved.