It's Nowhere Near Over In Texas, Many People Are Still Missing - Prayers Continue

Wednesday, July 9 2025

Share this story:

Disaster relief chaplain Sandi Gilmer, left, and Dan Beazley search for a permanent place for Beazley's large cross in memory of flooding victims near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas
AP Photo/Eli Hartman
Disaster relief chaplain Sandi Gilmer, left, and Dan Beazley search for a permanent place for Beazley's large cross in memory of flooding victims near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas

HUNT, Texas (AP) — Crews used backhoes and their bare hands Wednesday to dig through piles of debris that stretched for miles in the search for more than 160 people believed to be missing in the flash floods that laid waste to the Hill Country region of Texas.

Over 100 bodies have been recovered, but the large number of missing suggested that the full extent of the catastrophe was still unclear five days after the disaster.

“We will not stop until every missing person is accounted for,” Gov. Greg Abbott told a news conference Tuesday. "Know this also: There very likely could be more added to that list.”

Officials have been seeking more information about those who were in the popular tourist destination during the Fourth of July holiday weekend but did not register at a camp or a hotel and may have been in the area without many people knowing, the governor said.

The riverbanks and hills of Kerr County along the Guadalupe River, where most of the flood victims have been recovered so far, are filled with vacation cabins, youth camps and campgrounds, including Camp Mystic, the century-old all-girls Christian summer camp where at least 27 campers and counselors died. Officials said five campers and one counselor have still not been found.

Crews in air boats and helicopters and on horseback combed the terrain. They also used excavators and their hands, going through the earth layer by layer, with search dogs sniffing for any sign of buried bodies.

They were joined by hundreds of volunteers in one of the largest search operations in Texas history. The search has been slow, made more difficult by ongoing storms and dense layers of tangled trees and rubble.

Scenes of devastation at Camp Mystic

Outside the cabins at Camp Mystic where the girls had slept, mud-splattered blankets and pillows were scattered on a grassy hill that slopes toward the river. Also in the debris were pink, purple and blue luggage decorated with stickers.

Among those who died at the camp were a second grader who loved pink sparkles and bows, a 19-year-old counselor who enjoyed mentoring young girls and the camp’s 75-year-old director.

The flash floods erupted before daybreak Friday after massive rains sent water speeding down hills into the Guadalupe River, causing it to rise 26 feet (8 meters) in less than an hour. Some campers had to swim out of cabin windows to safety while others held onto a rope as they made their way to higher ground.

Just two days before the flooding, Texas inspectors signed off on the camp's emergency planning. But five years of inspection reports released to The Associated Press did not provide any details about how campers would be evacuated or the specific duties assigned to each staff member and counselor.

Eric Herr, a volunteer with Search and Support San Antonio, does search work on the banks of the Guadalupe River in Ingram, Texas
[Photo Credit: Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via AP] Eric Herr, a volunteer with Search and Support San Antonio, does search work on the banks of the Guadalupe River in Ingram, Texas

Recovery and cleanup efforts go on

The bodies of 30 children were among those that have been recovered in the county, which is home to Camp Mystic and several other summer camps, the sheriff said.

The devastation spread across several hundred miles in central Texas all the way to just outside the capital of Austin.

Aidan Duncan escaped just in time after hearing the muffled blare of a megaphone urging residents to evacuate Riverside RV Park in the Hill Country town of Ingram.

All his belongings — a mattress, sports cards, his pet parakeet’s bird cage — now sit caked in mud in front of his home.

“What’s going on right now, it hurts,” the 17-year-old said. “I literally cried so hard.”

A toy horse lies by a fallen tree limbs and debris in Kerrville, Texas
[Photo Credit: AP Photo/Ashley Landis] A toy horse lies by a fallen tree limbs and debris in Kerrville, Texas

 

Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press writers Joshua A. Bickel in Kerrville, Texas, Jim Vertuno in Austin, Texas, and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, contributed to this report.

 

 

 

 

 

© 2025 K-LOVE News

Share this story:

See All News