Penticton Herald

Port Alberni woman recalls fleeing 1964 tsunami in rowboat after massive quake

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VICTORIA — Lea Gardner remembers getting in a rowboat with her husband, three young children and the family dog to flee a tsunami that hit British Columbia 54 years ago.

But the 83-year-old Port Alberni resident says she calmly slept through Tuesday's tsunami warning that prompted evacuation­s after a magnitude 7.9 earthquake off the coast of Alaska.

“I never even heard the alarms last night,” said Gardner, who still lives in Port Alberni but on higher ground than she did in March 1964 when the tsunami hit the Vancouver Island community.

“We didn't know anything about it until my husband's friend phoned and asked how we made out,” she said.

Sirens blared in many B.C. coastal communitie­s and officials banged on doors to rouse people from their sleep in the middle of the night before the warning was lifted early Tuesday morning.

Gardner said the warning brought back memories of the night she and her family were awakened in 1964 by neighbours who said a tsunami was about to hit Port Alberni, located on a 40-kilometre inlet where the power of incoming tsunami waves are magnified by a funnel effect.

“(The neighbour) and my husband went down River Road and met logs ... and water and the police came along and told them to get to higher ground,” she said. “So they just turned around and came back to our place and we got our boat.”

Gardner said her family and neighbours rowed to a nearby home on higher ground where they were eventually picked up by family members who lived high above the area where the tsunami hit.

“The neighbours had grandparen­ts out from Saskatchew­an and we packed them up and their daughter and we rowed up to some friends up the street,” she said.

“In the boat was our youngest, who was two years old at the time, and Linda and Karen who were six and eight, and our neighbour's daughter and a dog.”

A report in the Alberni Valley Times newspaper said Gardner's husband Joe decided to put the family's new vacuum cleaner on top of a bed just before leaving their home.

Gardner said her house sustained water damage but because it was undergoing massive renovation­s it was livable after the tsunami. She said she and her husband now live in a seniors complex on a hill in Port Alberni.

Gardner said she does not live in fear of natural disasters like earthquake­s or tsunamis.

“I never worry about it. If there's an earthquake. These things happen,” she said.

The tsunami that hit Port Alberni more than 50 years ago was caused by a magnitude 9.2 earthquake off Alaska.

Two waves gathered force as they raced up the Alberni Inlet, sweeping away houses. The tsunami did not cause any deaths.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? RCMP Chief Supt. Sean Sullivan is the Island District officer in charge of B.C operations and police response to the tsunami warning issued for the west coast of Vancouver Island early Tuesday morning poses for a photograph at Whiffin Spit Park, B.C.
The Canadian Press RCMP Chief Supt. Sean Sullivan is the Island District officer in charge of B.C operations and police response to the tsunami warning issued for the west coast of Vancouver Island early Tuesday morning poses for a photograph at Whiffin Spit Park, B.C.
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