chen, cbs news, fort walton beach, flflorida. >> all right. nancy, thank you so much. >>> we are closely monitoring hurricane sally. cbs news weather producer david parkinson joins us now with the very latest on the storm's path. good morning, david. you are up early. >> reporter: well, good morning. this storm is rapidly intensifying as it approaches land, and that is really dangerous. so here's the latest on the storm that we have right now. the winds at 105 miles per hour. it is just 20 miles from gulf shores, alabama. but because the storm is only moving at two miles per hour, it's going to take some time to get there. the interesting thing here is that the eye is 35 miles long. so once you actually get into the eye, it may be calm for hours before then you get into the worst of the storm, and the eye wall, that eye wall is 20 miles wide. what you're dealing with are incredibly ferocious winds and rain rates at three, four, five inches an hour for hours on end because though it's only 20 miles wide, it is moving incredibly slowly. here's the rain so far. any place with white it over a foot. you're seeing some places with two feet of rain, and