so, the national hurricane center has done a really great job of warning people. we knew exactly where this storm was going to go. steve: yep. janice: and the intensity, which is one of the hardest things to forecast they had right on. category 3. border wall category 4 and that s exactly what we had. steve: you were talking about when it made landfall and that is for historical purposes. janice: yes. steve: so they can say it came ashore at this point. speaking of history. history is going to be made shoy in tallahassee. the state capital, has never in recorded history, going back to 1851, i think. tallahassee has never experienced a hurricane and it s heading their way, janice. janice: i think we have someone that s going to tell us about that, right? one of our multi media journalist? ainsley: i remember when i went to school in tallahassee we would have hurricane parties. brian: so there was a hurricane. steve: you were just looking for an excuse. ainsley: they
stronger. major hurricane. border wall category 4. we are expecting rapid intensification in the next 24 hours which we expect it making landfall around this time around the big bend of florida. so 75 mile-per-hour sustained winds. robert was talking about the water temperatures way above average this time of year in the path of this storm. at least 86 trees. that s the fuel that this storm needs to rapidly intensify. and not a lot of harv winds in the upper level of the 00 moss fear. nothing in its way. rapid intensification. here is your plan in the green areas you are making your plan, paying attention to the forecast. in the yellow area preparing for potential storm impacts including georgia and the carolinas. we are expecting a category 1 hurricane to move through georgia and go plan here finalizing preparations and evacuate going you are told to do. so you want to listen to your local authorities in the next 24 to 48 hours. are seeing outer bands moving approaching the west coa