have our fox news chief meteorologist rick reichmuth with us. rick this has been rough so far. really has. three things, the storm surge that broke records in fort myers and naples as well by a lot by the way, three feet higher than we had ever seen from any kind of storm surge in the past. that obviously causing all that flooding right along the immediate coast. then we have the winds, actual verified winds of 140 miles an hour in cape corral. a lot of this wind was really prolonged because it s such a slow-moving storm and then you have the rainfall. because it s so slow we get rainfall that just continues to batter the state and we ll see big time inland flooding concerns. this made land fall in the exact same space that hurricane charlie came on shore in 2004 which is amazing to have two massive hurricanes or two strong hurricanes like this come on shore in the exact same spot, hard to imagine, because it came on so strong, it s still a category 2 hurricane after having
sean: all right, nate, thank you as well. by the way i lived in southwest florida, had a place there for many, many years, i know naples, fort myers, sarasota leading up to tampa very well. the way the track of this storm is, that s the area where it hit very, very hard. fort myers, naples to the south, sarasota to the north and it literally is going right in from the western side of florida and then it s going to make a turn right up that i-4 corridor you hear about every election, right over orlando and then make itself towards the eastern seaboard of florida, that would be ponta ved, r. a, jacksonville florida, that area, and then you have to look at what happens in savannah georgia and moving up to charleston south carolina all the way in this hurricane. look at this, i think that s from the naples fire department. there s a lot of videos, that was under water all day, i believe that is the naples fire department and i ve seen pictures like that all day from fort myers, from napl