current projections, but once recently, too, that are bringing again, our biggest concern is the water up much higher. that -- is that storm stays a combination of all these offshore and as it starts to things is going to cause binge problems on the florida move up, it's going to be coastline if it keeps heading west. pushing an awful lot of water i'm going to watch it closely. until it starts making that, you off the ocean into the inlets, into the sebastian river inlet and the lagoons. it may have the possibility of know, strong north turn, we need to assume it's going to touch overtopping some dunes. the coastline. so we just want to make sure that this is going to be a we don't want to be caught off guard by a storm that is this strong. >> mike, i've been out there fairly significant -- very wet, very significant event as far as with you covering these storms, riding through these storms, the water push goes. documenting what happens. >> i want to remind our one thing that i've learned and i think you would agree, each storm has its own personality, right? residents to take hurricane some more about flooding, as we dorian very seriously. it is a category 5, very powerful storm. just raised. some more about the winds. it can be tempting to look at those spaghetti models and that track and hope for that turn to what's your expectation for this the north. one? >> my expectations for this one >> and jacksonville, florida is for florida, when it makes that turn, just offshore or on the one of the biggest cities in the u.s., and it could be directly coastline, wherever it is, we're going to have strong, gusty in dorian's path. cnn's diane gallagher is there. winds. there is going to be beach erosion. >> reporter: hurricane dorian may still be days away from there is going to be possible actually passing here around storm surge waves, depending, jacksonville, but officials are again, on how close it gets, but it's very crucial in how close not taking any chances. it gets. a local state of emergency goes