florida. earlier i told you, where the center of the storm was earlier this morning there were 17 storms within 100 miles and only one ib made landfall in florida in 2004, now where the center of dorian is, we went back to 1950, found 12 storms, only one made landfall two years ago on the florida peninsula. some in the gulf, many in the atlantic. a lot can happen here, percentages are on our side, every storm is different. let s take the cone of uncertainty. from miami up to georgia, the steering currents in the days ahead, will determine where we re going to have more of the warnings, where we ll have the storm surge watches and warnings, where we re going to find the winds be possibly more destructive. those currents that we re watching to steer this are in california, we have some time, but again, the good news now is you see the color of red just barely getting into puerto rico, we ve had 34 mile per hour
outer bands of rain are already moving in. by the time it clears puerto rico, they re saying it could be a category 3 and spin straight toward the u.s. mainland, specifically the southeast florida georgia and south carolina. here s the latest advisory from the national hurricane center what is the update. we have ourselves a hurricane as you mentioned, the center of the storm which was so hard to find yesterday was found a little further north than we thought it was going to be, the whole path shifted away from hispaniola, away from puerto rico, and the center s right over st. thomas, we had a wind gust of 111 miles an hour. the better news here, when you talk about what may happen, we don t know days later, i wouldn t everyone just make plans and think daytona is in the bull s eye here. san juan puerto rico, may be