KERR COUNTY, TEXAS—Rescue teams combed through shattered riverbanks and submerged neighborhoods Saturday as the death toll rose to 27—including 9 children—after the Guadalupe River exploded into a 29-foot tsunami overnight, swallowing summer camps, RV parks, and homes in one of Texas’ deadliest flood disasters. At least 27 girls remain missing from historic Camp Mystic, their fates unknown amid what officials call “a 1,000-year flood event”
⚠️ Critical Updates: July 5, 2025
- Confirmed Dead: 27 (18 adults, 9 children)
- Missing: 27+ (all girls from Camp Mystic, plus uncounted vacationers)
- Rescued: 850+ (237 via helicopter)
- Areas Worst Hit: Kerrville, Hunt, Comfort, Ingram
- Immediate Threat: New flash flood emergencies for Burnet, Travis, Williamson Counties; 2-4″ more rain expected
🌪️ How Hell Broke Loose: A Timeline of Terror
⏰ July 3, 11:00 PM
- National Weather Service issues flood watch for Kerr County, citing “heavy rainfall potential” from remnants of Tropical Storm Barry.
⏰ July 4, 1:30 AM
- Elinor Lester, 13, wakes to thunder at Camp Mystic: “Water was pelting our cabin. We saw younger campers running uphill from the riverbank cabins”.
⏰ 3:00 AM
- Erin Burgess clings to a tree in Bumble Bee Hills: “Water rushed through doors in 20 minutes. My 6’2” son saved me—we floated as my boyfriend and dog vanished”.
⏰ 4:03 AM
- Flash Flood Emergency issued for Kerr County. Guadalupe River surges 22 feet in 45 minutes at Hunt—exceeding 1987’s record flood.
⏰ 5:30 AM
- Camp Mystic’s desperate email to parents: “Catastrophic flooding… highway washed away… send help”.
⏰ Daybreak, July 4
- Helicopters pluck survivors from treetops. Janie Hunt, 9, confirmed dead; her mother posts: “She’s gone”.
🏕️ Camp Mystic: Ground Zero of the Tragedy
The 99-year-old Christian girls’ camp—a Texas institution—housed 750 children when floodwaters devoured riverside cabins. Why it couldn’t escape:
The 99-year-old Christian girls’ camp—a Texas institution—housed 750 children when floodwaters devoured riverside cabins. Why it couldn’t escape:
- Geography: Nestled where the river’s North/South forks converge—a “bowl” for floodwaters.
- No Warning System: Despite being in “Flash Flood Alley,” Kerr County lacks river alarms.
- Communication Blackout: No power, cell service, or roads cut off escape routes.
“The camp was completely destroyed. Everyone I know is accounted for, but others are missing.”
— Elinor Lester, 13, evacuated by helicopter
📊 By the Numbers: Anatomy of a Catastrophe
| Metric | Data | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Rainfall in Hunt | 6.5 inches in 3 hours | 1-in-100-year event |
| River Rise at Hunt | 22 ft in 45 mins | Surpassed 1987 record |
| Water Volume | 166,000 ft³/sec | From 95 ft³/sec pre-storm |
| Power Outages | 6,200+ homes | Could last days |
| Federal Response | FEMA + DHS mobilized | Kristi Noem en route |
🚁 Heroes in the Muck: Rescue Against All Odds
- 160+ Air Rescues: Coast Guard choppers used infrared to find survivors in treetops overnight.
- “Tree Rescues”: Teams waded chest-deep, pulling victims from oaks where they clung for hours.
- Ingram Reunification Center: School buses delivered shell-shocked children to sobbing parents. One father: “I waited 7 hours for my girls.”
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha vowed: “We will not stop until every single person is found.”
⛈️ Climate Change’s Fingerprints
Scientists confirm global warming amplified disaster:
- Warmer Air = Wetter Storms: Central Texas sees 20% more heavy rain days since 1900.
- Drought-Flood Whiplash: Parched soil repelled water like concrete, boosting runoff.
- Future Risk: Extreme rain intensity could rise 10% by 2036.
🕯️ Human Stories: The Missing and the Mourned
Families pleading for help on social media:
- The Knetsches: Retirees vanished from HTR RV Park.
- Ella Cahill, Aidan Heartfield, Joyce Badon, Reese Manchaca: Last text: “Trying to reach higher ground” at 4 AM Friday.
- Jane Ragsdale: Camp Mystic director found dead; camp calls her “heart and soul.”
At reunification centers, parents clutched photos like Natalie Landry’s of daughter Lainey: “Please find her.”
🚨 Ongoing Threats: More Rain, More Risk
- New Flash Flood Emergencies: Burnet, Travis, Williamson Counties under “life-threatening” warnings Saturday.
- San Gabriel River: Cresting at 30 ft—major flood stage—threatening Georgetown.
- Weekend Forecast: 50% chance of storms through Sunday, hampering searches.
🤝 How to Help
- Donate: Community Foundation of Texas Hill Country (flood relief fund).
- Report Missing Persons: Call Kerr County hotline: (830) 257-8181.
- Avoid Area: Officials beg tourists: “Do not come—roads are death traps”.
🏛️ Government Response
- Federal: Trump pledged aid: “We’ll take care of them”; FEMA teams deploying.
- State: Gov. Abbott’s disaster declaration covers 14 counties, unleashing National Guard.
- Local: Shelters opened in schools/churches; 1,000+ responders on ground.
📸 Visualizing the Devastation

- Drone shot of Camp Mystic ruins → Alt text: Aerial view of Camp Mystic destruction: cabins flattened, river mud engulfing dining hal.
- Rescue helicopter hoisting child → Alt text: Texas National Guard helicopter rescuing girl from treetop near Guadalupe River.
- Family portrait in debris → Alt text: Photo frame in flood wreckage: smiling couple now missing.
💬 Voices from the Ruins
- Jerry Adams, Hunt resident: “Camps and Crider’s rodeo were our lifeblood. Now it’s all gone.”
- Zerick Baldwin, Kerrville survivor: “If I’d slept in my truck, I’d be dead. Water came too fast.”
- Chloe Crane, ex-camp counselor: “Mystic was where girls found confidence. Now it’s a nightmare.”
⚠️ The Road Ahead: Grief, Questions, and Climate Reckoning
As searches continue, hard truths emerge:
- Texas’ “Flash Flood Alley” needs modern warning systems.
- Camps/river tourism require disaster protocols.
- Climate resilience can’t wait—extreme weather is the new normal.
For now, Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. said what all Texans feel: “Today will be a hard day. Please pray for our community”.
For real-time updates: NWS Austin/San Antonio
“When it rains here, water doesn’t soak in—it rushes downhill. We call it Flash Flood Alley for a reason.”
— Austin Dickson, CEO, Community Foundation of Texas Hill Country 4




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