Email from nephew Jason this next to last morning of the 2025 version of July, a day also known as Wednesday. The email included a screencap (not the one you see above) from a Washington news source known as the Bellingham Herald.
That screencap from the Bellingham Herald showed where tsunami waves were potentially going to hit various locations on the Washington Pacific Coast.
One of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded shook the east coast of Russia, yesterday, generating tsunami warning across the Pacific. By this morning most of those warnings had been lifted.
The text in Jason's email said, "So far the water has not reached Mount Vernon".
I replied that the same was the case at my location.
Mount Vernon is a few miles from water connected to the Pacific Ocean, that particular water is known as Puget Sound. It would be possible for a tsunami to hit the Pacific Coast, and continue through the Straits of Juan de Fuca, reaching Puget Sound, but that would need to be one really big wave.
Way back in 1964 a super strong earthquake shook Alaska. Back then there was no tsunami warning system. The Alaskan quake generated strong, what were then known as 'tidal waves', which struck the Washington Pacific Coast, doing some damage. And doing a lot of damage in Northern California, most severely to Crescent City, with that town's downtown destroyed, and over a dozen people drowned.
The last time I was on the Washington Pacific Coast, summer of 2004, I was sort of surprised to see multiple "Tsunami Evacuation Route" signs. This was something new. Prior to seeing those signs, on this visit to Washington I was surprised in the Tacoma zone, near Puyallup, to see "Volcano Eruption Evacuation Route" signs.
I assume the Volcano related signs were installed after the Mount St. Helens eruption made clear how dangerous such an event can be. The Tacoma/Puyallup "Volcano Eruption Evacuation Route" signs are due to the Mount Rainier volcano being nearby.
At my current location the nearest ocean water is hundreds of miles distant. There is no volcano for way more than hundreds of miles distant.
Hence, there are no signs at my North Texas location pointing to evacuation routes...










