In Big Sur, living with nature's beauty but trapped by Its fury.
Boulders for patching a cliff-side section of Highway 1 that crumbled in Big Sur, Calif., Jan. 30, 2023.
The locals have grown accustomed to recurring isolation over the years, but they have yet to solve for every predicament. A man in his 70s fell in his home and could not be reached by an ambulance. A third grader could not get to school. And a couple of the newly captive islanders ran out of blood pressure medications and resorted to eating as much garlic, a natural alternative, as they could stomach.
It is an exacting price those living in Big Sur have grown familiar with, paid for in repeat evacuations during wildfires and mudslides, and periods of isolation ever since Highway 1 was completed in 1937 along the coast. They result from geological forces that have conspired for millions of years before humans ever set foot on this coast. The hillsides consist of a mélange of sheared and metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks, crisscrossed with faults that allow water to seep beneath and destabilize the slopes.
Now, she has some 50 pounds of rice, 20 pounds of beans and a cupboard full of canned tuna that she guesses could last her and her partner, David, for at least year. In decades prior, road crews allowed residents to make their own decisions about when to come and go during landslides, locals say. State officials have organized occasional convoys to let residents caravan through the northern closures to make supply runs. About four weeks into the latest confinement, officials also sent a helicopter to drop a load of groceries, water, medication and mail.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Tackle 'Abuse of Water' by Big Ag and Big Oil, Advocates Say Amid Colorado River Fight.GreenMitchJones of foodandwater implored governors and the Biden administration to 'muster the political will to stop the expansion of water-intensive crops like tree nuts and alfalfa, factory farms, fracking, and fossil fuel extraction.'
Read more »
Bettor places $1 million on Eagles to win Super Bowl 2023Big money on the Big Game is starting to roll in.
Read more »
Big Tech earnings face more heat as cloud cover fadesBig Tech results reinforced concerns a boom in cloud services is easing, limiting a lucrative source of profit when a slowing economy has hit the companies' other businesses and prompting a bet on artificial intelligence as the next growth driver.
Read more »
White dog spotted living with coyote pack in Nevada rescuedDespite living out in the desert for months with a pack of coyotes, Ghost is as friendly as can be he takes to every human that he sees.
Read more »
There's a new world's oldest living dog -- and he's the oldest ever recordedBobi, at the age of 30 years and 268 days, has been crowned the world's oldest living dog -- and the oldest dog to ever live -- by Guinness World Records (GWR).
Read more »
There's a new world's oldest living dog -- and he's the oldest ever recordedBobi, at the age of 30 years and 268 days, has been crowned the world's oldest living dog -- and the oldest dog to ever live -- by Guinness World Records (GWR).
Read more »