without power and water and to not be able to move through these impassable streets. bill. the st. john s river was ridiculous, it was like trifecta. here we are a day later. they are sitting at what would normally be their record flood level. this shows you how extremely high it was, never seen before by anyone alive in the jacksonville area. it was because of a foot of rain a. five-foot storm surge by a tropical storm. remember, it wasn t a hurricane. and it was also at high tide yesterday right around noon and just those three things all applied to the same time there in the st. john s river, here s the rainfall map. it was one to two feet. we were focused on the st. john s river. there is numerous other rivers that have problems there in northeast florida. even a couple outside of tampa. the water heights have reached their peak in all cases, it s one of the richs there along the
areas. some small ports, no big cities in the way. the storm surge of 12 feet has happened or is happening. but we haven t heard a lot of ports about it. because it hasn t been populated areas. we ll find that out tomorrow. then the wind component of it will slowly weaken to tomorrow. by the time we get to saturday night, it s all about the rainfall. there s the rainfall map behind us here. this is the one that the people from our federal government that do our forecasting say they ve never made a forecast like this before. they ve never made a forecast calling for upward isolated totals of 40 inches of rain. right. add an extra color there, think. they did. on their color table. we ll find out. not everybody in that pink color will get 20 inches of rain, but somebody will get 30 to 40. you said to draw a triangle. maybe as far west as