Ana Sayfa Haberler Stricken Texas floods survivor recalls seeing people ‘die’ in worst way… as...

Stricken Texas floods survivor recalls seeing people ‘die’ in worst way… as new photos of Camp Mystic emerge: Live updates

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A Texas flood survivor has recalled the blood-curdling screams of families trapped in RVs, pounding on windows as raging floodwaters swept them away.

Lorena Guillen, owner of the Blue Oak RV Park in Ingram, near San Antonio, went door-to-door in the early hours of Friday morning, frantically trying to wake residents as water surged around them.

But as the flood rose foot by foot, she watched helplessly as vehicles floated by with families still inside, ‘screaming’ for help and ‘banging against the windows.’

Blue Oak, once a popular site for RVs and stay-in cabins, has been obliterated — all that remains are the bare slabs where cabins once stood.

As of Tuesday morning, the flash floods have claimed at least 105 lives, and authorities warn that the death toll is almost certain to rise.

Search efforts continue today, but officials have confirmed the operation has shifted from rescue to recovery.

Crews are now focused further west along the Guadalupe River at Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp where 27 campers and counselors were swept away and killed.

Haunting photos taken inside the cabins reveal the devastation, with beds twisted and overturned, walls smeared with mud and personal belongings scattered.

Haunting photos of Camp Mystic devastation emerge after camp confirms 27 are dead

Haunting new photos captured inside Camp Mystic show how an all-girls Christian summer camp now resembles a scene from a horror disaster film.

Cabin walls were completely ripped off from the storm, spewing debris and mud inside them. Furniture is seen lying on the floor across damaged rooms.

Crosses and other religious decorations that hung on the walls are now covered with residue from the floods.

Campers’ belongings, dressers and bunk bed mattresses were also spewed across the grounds following the flooding that completely destroyed the camp.

Twenty-seven Camp Mystic campers and counselors died after being swept away by raging floodwaters early Friday morning.

A view of a building missing a wall, in the aftermath of deadly flooding, at Camp Mystic, in Kerr County, Texas, U.S., July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Sergio Flores

Pictured: A cabin building missing a wall in the aftermath of deadly flooding at Camp Mystic

Art supplies lie on a damaged table inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic, in the aftermath of deadly flooding in Kerr County, Texas, U.S., July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Sergio Flores

Pictured: Art supplies lie on a damaged table inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic

Camper's belongings sit outside one of Camp Mystic's cabins near the Guadalupe River, Monday, July 7, 2025, in Hunt, Texas, after a flash flood swept through the area. (AP Photo/Eli Hartman)

Pictured: Campers’ belongings sit outside one of Camp Mystic’s cabins near the Guadalupe River on Monday

Crosses hang on a wall with flood marks at Camp Mystic, in the aftermath of deadly flooding in Kerr County, Texas, U.S., July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Sergio Flores

Pictured: Crosses hang on a wall with flood marks at Camp Mystic

Furniture lies on the floor in a damaged room, following flooding on the Guadalupe River, at Camp Mystic, Hunt, Texas, U.S. July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Marco Bello

Pictured: Furniture lies on the floor in a damaged room following flooding on the Guadalupe River at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas

Chairs lie inside a damaged room following flooding on the Guadalupe River, in Camp Mystic, Hunt, Texas, U.S. July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Marco Bello TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Pictured: Chairs lie inside a damaged room at Camp Mystic following flooding on the Guadalupe River

Campists' belongings lie on the ground following flooding on the Guadalupe River, at Camp Mystic, Hunt, Texas, U.S. July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Marco Bello

Pictured: Campers’ belongings lie on the ground following flooding on the Guadalupe River at Camp Mystic

Survivor recalls moment RV park residents were swept away by raging Texas floods

Lorena Guillen, the owner of Blue Oak RV Park in Ingram, rushed from trailer to trailer in the early hours of Friday morning, pounding on doors and urging residents to evacuate as the park began rapidly flooding.

But within minutes, cars and RVs began floating past her with families trapped inside as they were swept away by floodwater.

She could hear families screaming, honking, and banging desperately on windows.

‘It was pitch black, so all you could see was the lights floating and people screaming and banging against the window and honking,’ she told The Wall Street Journal.

She said the storm came essentially out of nowhere and arrived so quickly that water levels were up 10 feet in just one hour.

The businesswoman claims she called the Kerr County Sheriff’s department around 2am to ask if she needed to evacuate, but was told they had no information.

By 3.30am everyone at Blue Oak was forcibly leaving their homes.

She told WSJ: ‘It was just raining, you know, like nothing. We did have a warning, a flash flood warning, but this…is very, very normal for the Hill Country.’

All 33 RVs in her community were eventually washed away by the deadly storm.

Guillen revealed in previous interview with WOAI-TV that all of her residents except one family-of-five made it out of the floods safely.

Lorena Guillen14884395 Father swept away after he refused to give up 'babies' while clinging to tree during Texas flood
KERRVILLE, TEXAS - JULY 7: A view of the debris left by deadly flooding in Texas' Hill Country near the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas on July 7, 2025. (Photo by Jorge Salgado/Anadolu via Getty Images)
"You can see a lot of vehicles floating away with the lights on and you can hear a lot of honking and people banging against the windows screaming for help": RV park owner Lorena Guillen on what she saw and heard the night of the devastating floods in central Texas.
"You can see a lot of vehicles floating away with the lights on and you can hear a lot of honking and people banging against the windows screaming for help": RV park owner Lorena Guillen on what she saw and heard the night of the devastating floods in central Texas.

Psychology professor has died after being swept out of truck by raging river

University of Texas at San Antonio professor Katheryn Eads died in the central Texas flooding, the academic institution has confirmed.

Eads was camping with her husband Brian in the Hill Country when the waters came rushing in.

Brian told the New York Times, he and his wife were swept out of a truck by the water when he was hit in the head by the debris and lost track of her.

Eads was a psychology senior lecturer and a proud mother of three daughters and four grandchildren.

UTSA President Taylor Eighmy, in a statement, said: ‘The last several days have been deeply painful for our university community as we continue to learn more about the immense devastation and loss that is so close to us.’

Katheryn Eads - TEXAS FLOOD VICTIM - Kerrville, TX - https://www.facebook.com/keads/photos

Pictured: University of Texas at San Antonio professor Katheryn Eads was a proud mother of three daughters and four grandchildren

Katheryn Eads - TEXAS FLOOD VICTIM - https://www.facebook.com/brian.eads2/photos

Pictured: Eads was camping with her husband Brian in the Hill Country when the waters came rushing in. The couple were swept out of a truck by the water when he was hit in the head by the debris and lost track of her

Eads joined the UTSA staff in 2022 and became a full-time Department of Psychology faculty member earlier this year.

‘Dr. Eads was an extraordinary educator whose devotion to her students and to the craft of teaching embodied the very best of our academic community,’ Heather Shipley, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, said.

‘Through her insight, expertise and unwavering commitment to student success, she inspired generations of learners and colleagues alike. Her absence leaves a profound void at UTSA, but her impact will continue to resonate through the lives she touched.’

A ‘number’ of UTSA faculty and staff live or own property in the areas ravaged by the catastrophic floods this past weekend, the school notes.

Two UTSA students are also understood to still be missing.

The university has offered assistance and support to all those affected by the disaster.

Some flood warnings remain active today

Four flood warnings remain in effect for parts of central Texas this morning, but all flood watches across the state have been dropped.

Flood warnings are currently active for the Leon River at Gatesville in Coryell County, Cowhouse Creek near Pidcoke, and the San Saba River in San Saba County.

A flood warning is issued when hazardous weather event is imminent or actively occurring, according to the National Weather Service.

Forecasters warn scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon, but chances of rain will continued to decrease throughout the day.

They note that overall Tuesday will be significantly drier than the last several days.

Scattered storms are also forecast for Wednesday.

The National Weather Service warns that although widespread rain is not expected, isolated flooding remains possible.

Beloved country star suffers truly horrific loss in Texas floods

Country singer Pat Green suffered a ‘heartbreaking’ loss during the deadly Texas floods that have consumed the lives of more than 100 people.

The singer, who lives in Fort Worth, lost multiple family members in the flash floods that occurred in Kerrville, roughly 270 miles away from Green’s residence.

His brother John, sister-in-law Julia and two of their children were ‘swept away in the Kerrville flood’, Green’s wife Kori revealed in an Instagram post.

Green, who detailed his ‘deeply personal loss’ on social media, said: ‘We are grieving alongside countless Texans whose lives have been upended by this tragedy.

‘Right now, we kindly ask for privacy and space as we mourn, support each other and begin to process what comes next for our family.’

He added: ‘Thank you for your love, prayers, and compassion.’

Green was scheduled to play a concert in Luckenbach, a town about 60 miles from hard hit Kerr County, on Saturday – but the show has been postponed.

Texas country singer Pat Green says his family 'suffered a heartbreaking' loss in flood - https://www.instagram.com/patgreenmusic/p/CpeK80yt1N-/

Pictured: Country singer Pat Green, whose family suffered a ‘heartbreaking’ loss during the deadly Texas floods

John Burgess - TEXAS FLOOD VICTIM - https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10121991169636644&set=a.10100405851956304

Pictured: John and Julia Burgess with their two children

Search teams plodded through muddy riverbanks and flew aircraft over flood-ravaged central Texas on Monday, as hopes of finding survivors among dozens still missing from the devastating floods dimmed.

The bulk of the death toll from Friday’s calamity was concentrated in and around the riverfront town of Kerrville, situated in a swath of Texas Hill Country known as ‘flash flood alley.’

By Monday afternoon, the bodies of 84 flood victims – 56 adults and 28 children – were recovered in Kerr County, most of them in the county seat of Kerrville, according to the local sheriff.

The death count across the state rose to 105 by Tuesday morning, with at least 23 people still missing. While authorities held out hope that some of the missing would turn up alive, those who remain missing are now presumed dead.

With additional rain on the way, more flooding still threatens saturated parts of central Texas and authorities warn the death toll is sure to rise.

‘This will be a rough week,’ Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr said Monday.

He added: ‘We remain hopeful every foot, every mile, every bend of the river.’

Texas country singer Pat Green says his family 'suffered a heartbreaking' loss in flood - https://www.instagram.com/patgreenmusic/p/DIuXgPwJ6Yi/?img_index=1

Pictured: Pat Green and his wife Kori, who live in Fort Worth. Their loved ones in Kerrville, roughly 270 miles from their residence, were ‘swept away’ in Friday’s deadly flash floods

Texas country singer Pat Green says his family 'suffered a heartbreaking' loss in flood - https://www.instagram.com/p/DL1NIkdNTcn/

Pictured: Pat Green detailed the ‘deeply personal loss’ on social media

Some families have been frustrated by the pace of the search efforts, but officials are asking for patience with the breadth of the search area and methodical, no-stone-unturned approach.

It’s a sweeping operation with 19 different local and state agencies, drones, dogs, boats and helicopters.

Officials have laid out a grid over the search area. Each segment can reach over a mile and takes between one and three hours to search, Dalton Rice, the city manager of Kerrville, said at a news conference Monday morning.

Kori Green, in her social media post Monday, said of their missing family members: ‘We are heartbroken and anxiously waiting for all of them to be found.’

Texas flood deaths by county

The death toll from catastrophic flooding in Texas rose to more than 100 on Monday, as rescuers continued their grim search for people swept away by torrents of water.

Kerr County, through which the Guadalupe River runs, was the hardest hit, with at least 84 people killed including 28 children, according to the local sheriff’s office.

The toll includes 27 who had been staying at Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian camp that was housing about 750 people when the floodwaters struck.

Here is a breakdown of the 105 confirmed deaths by county, as of Tuesday morning:

  • Kerr County: 84
  • Travis County: 7
  • Burnet County: 5
  • Kendall County: 6
  • Williamson County: 2
  • Tom Green County: 1

Elderly man suffered heart attack after honking horn to help neighbors evacuate flash floods

Lyle and Sue Glenna, were completely devastated by the flooding in TX. They were able to walk alway with their lives, and the clothes on their backs. Everything they own in the world was swept away. During the tragedy, Lyle had a heart attack and was hospitalized. He is recovering, but obviously, the trauma and stress will make it slow going. They were able to save many lives at the campground by having the presence of mind to honk their horn and wake people up, giving precious minutes for some to evacuate. Many friends were swept away. Loving friends and family have given them a place to stay as long as they need. Sue and Lyle have to rebuild their lives from scratch. We'd love to help them ease some of the immense burden in any way we can. Please send prayers, love and if able, some funds, to help during this unimaginable time.

An elderly man who escaped the deadly Texas floods with his wife and helped save others in his community suffered a heart attack during the tragedy.

Lyle and Sue Glenna survived the catastrophic floods, but everything they own was lost in the disaster, according to a GoFundMe campaign established in their honor.

The couple helped save ‘many lives’ at the campground by honking their car horn to wake others up, ‘giving precious minutes for some to evacuate’.

But Lyle unfortunately had a heart attack during the floods and was hospitalized, with his loved ones saying the ‘trauma and stress’ has made is recovery ‘slow going’.

The couple lost many friends, their home and all their belongings in the disaster.

They have been provided temporary housing with family, but will need to ‘rebuild their lives from scratch’, their loved ones say.

The crowdfunding campaign set up to provide them with aid during this ‘unimaginable time’ has already raised more than $20,000, as of Tuesday morning.

Who are the Texas flood victims? Heartbreaking photos of the dead as more than 100 killed in disaster

Father swept away after he refused to give up ‘babies’ while clinging to tree during Texas flood

A father who lost his life in the tragic Texas floods had desperately clung to his ‘babies’ as the waters ravaged the RV park where his family was vacationing.

John Burgess, 39, was found dead after the deluge swept him away from the RV park with his two young boys. Their mother was also taken by the floodwaters.

Family members confirmed John’s death and recently announced that his wife, Julia Anderson Burgess, 38, was also killed in the floods.

Their two young boys – James, 1, and Jack, 5 – are still missing.

The couple’s daughter, Jenna, was staying at a nearby camp that wasn’t impacted by the floods. She has been found safe but was left to deal with the tragedy.

Witnesses said the father’s haunting last moments were spent clinging to a tree while trying to save his sons.

Texas floods rescue takes a grim shift to recovery mission

Rescue efforts to find survivors in the aftermath of flash floods in Texas were shifting toward a recovery mission as hopes that anyone would be found alive began to fade.

The death toll surpassed 100 on Monday and amid fears of worsening weather Governor Greg Abbott vowed to stop at nothing to find every single one of those still unaccounted for.

But first responders have been confronted with the sobering reality that, as the search enters a fifth day, finding survivors is growing increasingly unlikely.

National Association for Search and Rescue executive director Chris Boyer told the New York Times it is ‘a very personal decision by that community and the community leaders about when to start discussing recovery.’

He added: ‘You don’t want to start using the word “recovery” too soon. But you also don’t want to give false hope.’

Breaking:Body of girl, 8, found after Camp Mystic tragedy

Search and rescue crews have found the body of an eight-year-old Camp Mystic camper who was swept away by the deadly Guadalupe River floods.

Mary Grace Baker’s death was confirmed by her family’s parish priest, Father Andrew Moore of St. Anne Catholic Church in Beaumont, early Tuesday morning.

Fr. Moore shared a message from the third grader’s mother Katie with WOAI-TV. It reads: ‘We have received confirmation that our precious angel has been found.

‘We have felt all of your prayers and support the past couple of days. Please continue to lift us up as we do not see how we can possibly carry on without her. We will share details regarding her rosary and funeral as they are finalized.’

Mary Grace Baker - TEXAS FLOOD VICTIM - https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1295344895932717&set=a.486818240118724
The body of Mary Grace Baker has been found, according to Father Andrew Moore of St. Anne Catholic Church.Mary Grace, a 3rd grader at St. Anne Catholic School, was attending Camp Mystic when it was overrun by floodwaters.Father Moore shared a message from Mary Grace's mother, Katie:"We have received confirmation that our precious angel has been found. We have felt all of your prayers and support the past couple of days. Please continue to lift us up as we do not see how we can possibly carry on without her. We will share details regarding her rosary and funeral as they are finalized."

The church and school community also paid tribute to the young girl, hailing her ‘kindness’, ‘friendship’, ‘joyful spirit’ and ‘love for her faith and family’.

‘Her giggle was contagious, as was her spirit,’ St.Anne’s wrote in a heartbreaking Facebook post.

‘We are heartbroken at the loss of our Mary Grace. Words are difficult to find, but we take comfort that her earthly body has been found, and her pure soul is now wrapped in the arms of Jesus. Please continue to pray for the Baker family and all those in our school community affected by this unimaginable loss.’

Mary Grace loved art, dance and playing little league. She also loved all things pink, sparkles and wearing ‘bows in her signature angelic ringlet curls’, her school says.

She recently celebrated her First Communion and ended her second-grade year by receiving the Elizabeth Ann Seton Award, which is presented to exemplary people whose support and service impacts Catholic education and the well-being of others.

Texas floods death toll tops 100

The Texas floods death toll rose to 105 overnight.

The toll includes 27 who had been staying at Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian camp that was housing about 750 people when the floodwaters struck.

Kerr County, through which the Guadalupe River runs, was the hardest hit, with at least 84 people killed including 28 children, according to the local sheriff’s office.

Kendall County, which sits around 18 miles from downtown San Antonio, reported six deaths Monday.

At least 23 people remain missing. A massive search is underway involving hundreds of volunteers and more than 20 state agencies.

Officials also warn the final death total will almost certainly continue to rise.

ANKARA, TURKIYE - JULY 8: An infographic titled "Floods in US state of Texas" created in Ankara, Turkiye on July 8, 2025. At least 104 people have been killed across six counties as a result of Texas flash floods. (Photo by Yasin Demirci/Anadolu via Getty Images)

 

 

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