houston but we are watching you all over texas, southeast texas and louisiana. we are watching the future radar. a trough picks this thing up north and eastward. still dealing with the potential for flooding not only southeast texas, louisiana, mississippi, across the florida panhandle and up towards the mississippi river valley. there is the official track making another landfall in cammeron, louisiana, i mention drier skies, we saw rob, drier skies, still see bayou levels at or capacity for the next several weeks. and if i could, i just want to point out that this now is the wettest texas tropical system if we reach past 52 inches, that will make it of all time in u.s. history. one more thing. we are in the tropical season. we are watching this off the coast of africa. why? we we get into the weekend and next week this will be a major hurricane perhaps
thousand. abby: now they re just taking walk-ins because you get 70 people in there. what s so hardworking about that, these convention centers, the only place people can go to get food and water. sandra: went to bring in janice dean, speaking of which. janice dean, as we bring you in, that level could to be breached, 49.2 inches has fallen. 49.32 at mary s creek and that surpasses, ed is now the wettest texas tropical system of all time. if we get past a 53, that will surpass 1950s hurricane out in hawaii and i think you re going to do it. i ve seen unofficial totals of over 52 inches of rain. historic rainfall, devastating, catastrophic, you name it. i have to say, the national