Copy link to clipboard
Copied
As a rule, the snow level in my area never drops much below 1500 ft level. I can can count on 2 fingers the number of times it actually snowed here and it didn't last long. A BLIZZARD warning in Southern California is a very rare event.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Really bad, and I have to wonder if insurance right on the edge of the ocean (is that where this is, on land overlooking the ocean?) will pay when the house falls over the edge?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Some homes have ocean views but many inland homes don't. The ground is so over saturated that underground springs and sink holes are wreaking havoc everywhere. And more rain is expected.
House insurance is usually mandatory unless the house is fully paid for. But I don't know if it covers loss of the land it sits on.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I'm guessing that insurance might cover it, if the policy included it. But finding a company to cover that might be very difficult. We has AAA insurance before we moved to Pismo Beach. AAA took one look at the hill behind our house and said that they would not insure us. There was an article in the local SLO paper, last year, about a house that has lost about 23 feet of property, due to it falling in the ocean. The homeowners want to build a seawall, but the Coastal Commission is denying them, as the house was built after the moratorium on costal building. The article said that the Costal Commission would rather see the house slide I to the ocean and create more public access.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Drone footage.
Drone Video Shows Buried Highway After California Landslide (msn.com)
HINT:
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
We're preparaing for our second Bomb Cyclone. We haven't fully recovered from the last one 2 weeks ago.
Second bomb cyclone in two weeks crashing into California (msn.com)
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now