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Reports of over 20 young camp girls missing In TX floods

Posted on 7/4/25 at 3:51 pm
Posted by sidewalkside
rent free in yo head
Member since Sep 2021
4163 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 3:51 pm
It’s a really sad situation.
Top Replies
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
71034 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 10:48 am to
quote:

This video is actually shot in Center Point.

Here is the original posting of the video by the person who recorded it. Who ever posted that to Xwitter took it from someone who put their name on it and sped it up.

Anyway, this is the full-length video in better quality:
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 10:49 am
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
71034 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 1:08 pm to
A great post by James that needs to be read by many asshats yelling from the sidelines:

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quote:

TEXAS FLOOD: There are many questions about the tragic flash flood on the Guadalupe River late Thursday night and early Friday morning. The death toll is now over 50, including some children who were at Camp Mystic.

Here are some key points about the warning process...

*A flash flood watch was issued for Kerr County at 12:41a CT (just after midnight Thursday night). The watch mentioned isolated rain amounts of 10 inches, and stated "Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. Creeks and streams may rise out of their banks." This followed a flash flood watch that was issued Thursday afternoon.

*A flash flood warning was issued at 1:14a CT For Kerr County, which mentioned "life threatening flash flooding of creeks, streams, and rivers".

*A flash flood "emergency" was issued at 5:34a CT for Kerr County and the Guadalupe River.

*NWS Austin/San Antonio had five on staff during the event; normally two would be on duty. Extra staffing was planned before the event started.

*This type of flash flooding on the Guadalupe River is nothing new. Similar events happened in 1998, 1978, 1935, and 1921. This year's event was related to deep moisture from a tropical system (Barry) that originated in the East Pacific and made landfall near Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico, on June 29.

Social scientists will do much research on this in coming months and years. In my opinion one of the primary problems is the high number of false alarms; flash flood warnings that are issued with only minor flooding involved. This is also a problem with tornadoes in many parts of the country. I am very thankful locally NWS Birmingham leads the nation in lowering the false alarm ratio.

One takeaway is the importance of having a NOAA Weather Radio at every home, business, and any place where there are large number of people gathered (like a camp on a river). I would imagine cell service is very spotty along the Guadalupe where the camps were located. NWR does not use cell service and will wake you up. The alert is very loud, and can't be missed.

Again, I ask that you keep political rhetoric off the comment section here; left wing and right wing extremists are pushing false information and narratives are not close to the truth. Now is simply the time to support families that are suffering after the tragedy.

We will have a long discussion on this event with the WeatherBrains crew tomorrow night. In addition to the audio podcast you can watch it live as well on the WB YouTube Channel: YouTube.com/weatherbrains
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
71034 posts
Posted on 7/8/25 at 9:15 pm to
And this is a good geological breakdown of the landscape and why/how it is so flood-prone.
This post was edited on 7/8/25 at 9:25 pm
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
71034 posts
Posted on 7/9/25 at 8:40 pm to
Interesting article from KSAT

quote:

Kerrville mayor says he wasn’t aware of state resources that Gov. Abbott said were in place ahead of flooding


quote:

Kerrville’s mayor said he was unaware of any help sent by the state to his community ahead of the flood, a day after Gov. Greg Abbott said the state had “assets, resources and personnel” in place two days before a flood tore through the Hill Country, claiming 120 lives as of Wednesday evening.

“The state was aware that there was a possible serious flooding event days in advance and pre-positioned assets and resources and personnel,” Abbott said at a Tuesday press conference. “We originally pre-positioned those assets, personnel and resources on Wednesday. Then, when greater clarity was discerned on Wednesday, we moved them closer and made sure we had adequate supplies going into Friday. We were ready.”

The Texas Division of Emergency Management “activated” state emergency response resources across West Texas and the Hill Country on July 2, according to a TDEM press release. TDEM cited “heavy rainfall with the potential to cause flash flooding” and encouraged Texans to prepare for flooded roads and monitor weather forecasts.

The state agency listed a number of state agencies and Texas A&M services “available to support local flood response operations,” such as rescue boat teams, helicopters, and personnel to monitor road conditions.

Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring said during a press conference on Wednesday that he wasn’t aware of any resources or personnel sent to his area, although the TDEM had people in Kerrville after the floods struck his city.

“I haven't seen the governor’s remarks ... I don't know what resources TDEM had in place at that time,” Herring said.



quote:

NWS officials said they communicated directly with local officials the night of the flood, but Herring said he wasn’t aware of the flooding until around 5:30 a.m. when the city manager called him. By that time, floodwaters were already meters high and parts of Highway 39 were flooded, limiting evacuation efforts.



quote:

“The losing teams are the ones that try to point out who's to blame,” Abbott said. "The championship teams are the ones that say, ‘Don't worry about it, man, we got this.’”

“The way winners talk is not to point fingers, they talk about solutions. What Texas is all about is solutions,” he later added.


Posted by Mr Sausage
Cat Spring, Texas
Member since Oct 2011
15318 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 12:39 pm to
quote:

have any cadaver dogs been deployed,


yes.

and for some perspective on what they are dealing with:



thats a F-250 buried in rocks.

Posted by Dawgsontop34
Member since Jun 2014
45508 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 8:56 pm to
This article is a horror story. Chilling to say the least, but an incredible retelling of what one family went thru.

Texas Monthly Article
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 8:56 pm
Posted by East Coast Band
Member since Nov 2010
66862 posts
Posted on 7/12/25 at 12:14 pm to
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No nonsense 12 minute video discussing from a meteorological side...
All Replies (1032)
Posted by TT9
Global warming
Member since Sep 2008
90062 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 3:52 pm to
Horrible news. damn
Posted by TigerBait2008
Boulder,CO
Member since Jun 2008
37531 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 3:52 pm to
Yes thanks for details that's the sad situation.
Posted by MC5601
Tyler, Texas
Member since Jan 2010
4168 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:04 pm to
LINK


Within 45 minutes, the Guadalupe River rose 26 feet and it was a destructive flood — taking property and sadly lives," Patrick said during a news conference Friday afternoon.

Link since OP was not decent enough to include


He addressed parents of children at Camp Mystic, where there were 700 children at summer camp when the floods hit. The lieutenant governor, who is acting as governor while Gov. Greg Abbott is on vacation, said around 20 children were unaccounted for on Friday. He said they are praying for all those missing "to be found alive."
This post was edited on 7/4/25 at 4:08 pm
Posted by Chicken
Jackassistan
Member since Aug 2003
26321 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:06 pm to
We know someone at Camp Lajunta (all boys camp)...it is right on the river in Hunt, TX, just upstream from Kerrville... Everyone is accounted for.

Terrible situation at Camp Mystic.
This post was edited on 7/4/25 at 4:36 pm
Posted by TigerBait2008
Boulder,CO
Member since Jun 2008
37531 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:07 pm to
Ty mc5601
Posted by LSUminati
Member since Jan 2017
3967 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:11 pm to
The Texas summer camp circuit is a big deal in Houston. People always talking about their kids at so and so camp. Can’t help but think and hope and pray everyone’s kids are ok.
Posted by East Coast Band
Member since Nov 2010
66862 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:11 pm to
Flash flooding is no jokes Especially in unfamiliar areas and at night.
Terrible to hear this.
Posted by Monahans
Member since Sep 2019
2109 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:12 pm to
My 8 year old is at La junta. I’m an hour and 40 minutes away. The whole camp is packed into the only two cabins that survived. Rest of the camp is gone. Have several friends with daughters at mystic that are beside themselves
Posted by Lexis Dad
Member since Apr 2025
4422 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:14 pm to
Christ that's awful. Those poor girls.

My daughter had her GS camp a month ago so this hits close.
Posted by Oates Mustache
Member since Oct 2011
25782 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:14 pm to
frick man. This is horrible.
Posted by Tigershat
Member since Sep 2007
1860 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:15 pm to
2 of the cabins impacted at Camp mystic were for the youngest of the campers there. If I am not mistaken this is right around the time camp pick up would be. Gut wrenching.

Praying they continue to rescue all remaining.
This post was edited on 7/4/25 at 4:17 pm
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
72557 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:16 pm to
Damn, that’s terrible.
Posted by ellunchboxo
G-Town
Member since Feb 2009
19257 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:17 pm to
My daughter goes to HOH there.

Word is the owner died in the flood.

Terrible.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
104078 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:21 pm to
A lot of Louisiana kids go to Mystic too.
Posted by IamNotaRobot
OKC
Member since Nov 2021
1418 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:30 pm to
Damn man. Very sorry to hear that.
Posted by TigerBait1971
PTC GA
Member since Oct 2014
15889 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:32 pm to

Holy shite that is so sad.

No forecasting could have given some warning? I know nothing about flash floods like that.
Posted by Tigershat
Member since Sep 2007
1860 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:37 pm to
quote:

A lot of Louisiana kids go to Mystic too.


Yea, my wife went there with a few kids from the Lake Charles area as did my daughter with kids from Lake Charles and Shreveport. They both went from 7 years til 18 years old and loved the camp. Such nice family who owns/runs it (Eastland family), such a tragedy. Those poor, poor parents. I can't imagine.

Edit: Correction, they had just had drop off for the girls for the camp term.
This post was edited on 7/4/25 at 4:55 pm
Posted by idlewatcher
Planet Arium
Member since Jan 2012
91812 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:41 pm to
Couldn’t even imagine being their parents right now. How terrible.

Hug your kids tight gents
Posted by C
Houston
Member since Dec 2007
28144 posts
Posted on 7/4/25 at 4:50 pm to
quote:

Within 45 minutes, the Guadalupe River rose 26 feet


That’s insane. I can imagine you stepping outside and seeing the water 10 ft below you, having a shower, then coming out to it already being at your doorstep. I have to imagine that would be very difficult to predict, warn against and take action with so many young kids.
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