of the numbers. in terms of reality, that is something that destroys homes and takes lives. so the area that we're in and the two surrounding zones of the county we're in have been mandatorily evacuated. but whether people heed that order is something else. coming in, we saw traffic here. i've seen people walking along here saying, we think we'll be okay. here's the problem, wolf. that thought is not based on prior experience. nobody has seen anything like what this storm could be in at least the past decade along the east coast of florida. they don't know what to expect and the problem is, once it gets bad, it is too late to move. so the authorities here are saying, know that we are expecting winds in excess of 100 miles an hour, the st. james river here which feeds from the intercoastal and the ocean off the east coast of florida, they're expecting 6 to 10 feet of surge. that means that we'll be well under water. your cars are flooded. your home is flooded and power will be out for hundreds of thousands, maybe for days. so at that point, wolf, it's too late to leave.