here in a naples area. when the storm arrived on wednesday between 1:00 and 2:00 if i m right about that with the eyewall east coast time. this is the eyewall first made landfall. why is that important? these islands are low lying. we talked earlier in the week about sanibel island having three feet elevation off the shore. if you have a storm coming from due north/northeast and it has gathered all this strength and it is a category 4 and you don t have much to stop it, what happens here, dana, you see the waterways that run up here? they have different tributaries and rivers, etc. this is the sound. you think about this water coming up here up in the sound into charlotte harbor. there is a river to the south to the north of fort myers, the river here.
wedding had this unexpected crash. dillon and riley, a., congrats, and b., what was going through your mind with all of this careful planning? yeah. well, so, we knew that the weather was going to be a little crazy but we were mainly worried about hurricane darby that was supposed to come. that was the new concern. we knew the waves were up, we live add 3,000 feet elevation. we could see that the whole coastline was covered in whitewash. yeah, all day long, they weren t really reaching over the wall. but in the video, you can see, basically, it s just the catering area, that big wave got to. so, we were pretty fortunate, but, yeah, definitely, definitely pick up some of the empty catering tables and then that backup bar. unfortunately, what you can t see, on the other side of the
taking down power lines and will continue to do so. it ll take you through the night overnight tonight into tomorrow a lot of heavy snow, right along the coastal areas heavy rainfall no snow for d.c., new york or boston, again some of the snowy areas over a foot of snow in these interior areas. the winter storm advisories are not along the coast i want to leave you with this were talking about heavy rain up and down the coast we can see coastal flood alerts if you not seen the snow you ll see rain if you re not seen rain you ll see really heavy snow over the next 24 hours. jon: and millions of us affected. adam klotz, thank you. fox team coverage continues with fox whether multi-journalist in natural. good evening from a very snowy asheville north carolina sitting at 2100 feet elevation.
this is in los angeles. it was down to about 800 feet elevation. extremely rare for areas around l.a. to see snow flakes. so what we re going to deal with today is we have the flood threat in the southeast. severe weather thread tomorrow and still dealing with a huge snow effort in areas of arizona. high risk of flash flooding throughout areas of northern mississippi, eastern arkansas and a lot of rivers are already extraordinarily high and another 2 to 4 inches today and here s our severe weather threat. we may get a few tornados tomorrow in areas. we ve got to flooding threat and tornado threat and arizona, the snow is epic right now. flag staff has reported 3 feet of snow in the last 24 hours. that s in one day. pretty crazy stuff. and then this weekend, watch out, blizzard conditions coming from nebraska, mississippi and
another little shot of rain by the time we get towards monday and that s from an additional system, little clipper system that s going to drop out of canada. you see this little bit of snow eventually accumulates mostly across higher elevations about 1500 feet elevation. winds wise it s not going to be that bad. by this afternoon do expect to see some breezy conditions. could cause a few delays across some of the airports here right along the coast. maybe coastal flooding problems. temperaturewise, take a look at this across the central plains, how is that? 70 s almost in november here and got 70s going on. not bad, guys? pete: not bad at all. ed: we missed you? rachel: i missed you, rick. ed: new jersey s jay webber ran for office. he expected to face criticism but not to have his seven kids threatened. he joins us next hour to explain. what an awful story. rachel: it is an awful story. what do wisconsin voters care about most?