And then into Washington Parish. Uh so far, it looks like maybe clipping kind of extreme western Hancock and up toward Pearl River County, if the storms kind of move along that path. But notice out toward the southeast of these, they are still being fed in by quite a bit of moisture. Now, across much of southeast Louisiana, we've seen that moisture kind of get cut off and hopefully that is a trend which will continue. We have got a dry slot here, mostly dry along the southern coast, but it's still able to feed in from a little bit of moisture right in through here, which is helping to fuel the storms kind of now going towards Slydale and further in towards Saint Tammany or further through Saint Tammany and the southern Treo Parish. We also have this long line kind of that uh deep moisture fetch coming toward Biloxi. We we'll look at the accumulation totals there over the course of the next couple of hours or so. Thankfully, the storm is moving away. So conditions improving from the south shore toward the coast. Yes, we still have the flooding concerns in JP. I'm sure we'll get some more reports and uh live updates here uh shortly with regards to what has been saying, with regards a lot, what am I doing uh with the, uh the, the flooding of the three major canals in northern J in eastern Jefferson Parish. And hopefully again, we do not see those issues on the north shore as the kind of arc of storms that we have been watching continues moving up towards the north. So things are starting to settle right now across uh JP and areas south starting to now get into the worst parts of the storms for uh northern or excuse me, for our northern parishes in the Florida parishes through the north shore. And we'll be watching those steadily through the next few hours. I look at water vapor just to kind of see where that moisture is still kind of being fed into the storm. Here was the uh kind of upper trough that we have been talking about as this kind of lifts off and merges with the storm center. We're gonna see that kind of stall out and may become more of a flooding issue up farther to the north. But notice how that wind shear is really just helping to rip apart all of those stronger storms moving all of those clouds away and off to the east. So the wind shear, dry air really starting to take over and that will be the trend through the rest of the night. Tonight. All right, Chris. Thank you so much.