make sure you have provisions for about three or four days because you could be isolated. i will show you a little bit why. this is a low-lying area, even the -- you can see behind, me this is the st. marks river. starting seal a lit of rain, raindrops from the initial bands of the hurricane coming this way. if we are lucky, during this live shot, you might see flashes of lightning on the horizon, which are really cold look at at night. it's not cool, of course, if you are being pounded by 80 mile per hour winds and getting a ton of rain on, but that coming in the next few hours. what makes this unique is that it's so low-lying, you've got three waters converging rate here. this is the st. marks river, the waukesha river is a few yards downstream, and then where i am, this is the appalachian bay. it has not had a hurricane of this kind of strength in recorded history come right up the bay. so there is no real barometer to which to measure how this area can absorb a hit that it is about to take. what we are told is now between