At least 95 dead in Kerr County, Texas, after flash floods

Madeline Halpert
BBC News
REUTERS/Sergio Flores 
Furniture and various colorful bags of clothes and other items sit on the dirt along with wet mattresses in the background REUTERS/Sergio Flores
Items from inside a cabin sit on the ground at Camp Mystic, in the aftermath of deadly flooding in Kerr County.

When Christian Fell saw flood waters beginning to fill his home in Hunt, Texas, last Friday, it was already too late to react.

The Texan is one of hundreds who had to evacuate his home when flash floods swept through south central Texas, killing 120 people in the state, including 95 people as of Wednesday in Mr Fell's Kerr County.

Mr Fell told the BBC that when he saw the waters, he tried to leave his kitchen to get to his truck in the pitch black, but when he opened the door a "huge wall of water" came toward him.

"I tried closing the door, and I couldn't get that done because just how powerful the water was, and so I had to go back further into the house," he said.

Watch: BBC comes across caravans destroyed by Texas flooding

Mr Fell's furniture was floating in the flood waters in his home as he climbed over them to make it to his bedroom. There, he said, he spotted a window and swam through it before climbing on top of a meter box outside, where he stood for three hours.

He only climbed down when he saw a police officer walking in the street.

"I was clinging on to the side of the house, just praying the water would stop," he said.

Mr Fell said he did not receive any weather alerts until water was already in his house.

At least 36 children and 59 adults have died in the floods in Kerr County alone, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said at a news conference on Wednesday.

Officials are continuing their extensive search and rescue missions, using heavy equipment to remove debris, police said.

Mr Leitha said more than 150 people were still missing in the county as of Wednesday morning, including five campers and a counsellor from Camp Mystic, a Christian all-girls summer camp located on the banks of the Guadalupe River.

In the first hour of the floods on Friday, emergency responders evacuated over 100 homes and rescued over 200 people, waking people up and pulling them out of their residences, said Jonathan Lamb, community services officer for the Kerrville Police Department (KPD).

"Folks, I don't know how many lives our KPD team saved in an hour in Kerrville, but I know that this tragedy, as horrific as it is, could have been so much worse," Mr Lamb said.

Maria Paula Zarate and Silvana Garza Valdez were working as counselors at Camp Mystic, the Christian girls' camp in Kerr County, when the Guadalupe River began to rise in the early hours Friday.

Ms Zarate said she and the campers could not sleep when it started raining because it was so loud.

"It was a storm like I had never experienced before in my life," Ms Garza Valdez said.

The camp waterfront was crumbling with dirt and mud, Ms Garza Valdez said. She said some of the counselors started to cry after they were told it was time to evacuate, with Army trucks coming to rescue them.

"I felt like I was in a dream," she said.

Ms Zarate noted that the river was "full of furniture that had come from other camps."

Questions have been raised about whether authorities provided adequate flood warnings before the disaster, and why people were not evacuated earlier.

Experts say there were a number of factors that contributed to the tragedy in Texas, including the extreme weather, the location of the holiday homes and timing.

Governor Greg Abbott said authorities had issued a storm warning and knew about a possible flash flood, but "didn't know the magnitude of the storm".