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US: Texas local recalls catastrophic Guadalupe River floods
Storyline: Surging floodwaters from the Guadalupe River engulfed a Texas resident's holiday cabin in the pre-dawn hours of Friday, with the local describing the disaster as beyond anything he had imagined. Friday's torrential rains unleashed catastrophic flash floods in central Texas, leaving at least 104 people dead as of Monday afternoon, according to local authorities. Of the fatalities, at least 84 have occurred in Kerr County, including 28 children. According to Brian, a Texas local who rents a riverside cabin to holidaymakers, the flow rate of the nearby Guadalupe River dramatically changed in the early hours of July 4. Within less than an hour, the river surged from a small stream to a nine-meter-high destructive torrent, flooding the second floor of the cabin. Fortunately, a flood warning system was set off in advance and the occupant of the building was evacuated to safety, he said. The cabin, however, sustained severe water damage in the disaster. Upon learning about the devastating loss of life from the floods, Brian explained that the timing of the disaster left no chance to evacuate everyone to higher ground. Although Brian's area is prone to flooding, he admitted that the sheer intensity of Friday's flood was overwhelming. The U.S. National Weather Service said that scattered showers and storms late on Monday and Tuesday are unlikely to pose additional flood threats to central Texas, as rescuers continue to search for dozens of missing people. Shotlist: Texas, USA - July 7, 2025: 1. Various of damaged riverside wooden cabin, locals 2. Damaged roof 3. SOUNDBITE (English) Brian, cabin owner (full name not given) (partially overlaid with shot 4): "The water got up all the way over the second level. So, that's about 30 feet down there, and it all came up, I think, maybe in about an hour. Normally this river is just a trickle, it's just a little bit of water. [When the flood came,] It's just too much water, it's too fast. It went up 30 feet up there in 30 minutes, something like that. So, even if the alert system goes off, but it's four or five [o'clock] in the morning, everyone's in bed. And by the time you start to get people to higher ground, it's too late." [SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE] 4. Floodwater inside cabin [SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE] 5. Cabin being cordoned off 6. SOUNDBITE (English) Brian, cabin owner (full name not given): "We're having to rip the floors out, rip the sheet rock out, and all the appliances have to come out. And I've never seen it. I mean, I've seen a lot of floods, it floods a lot here, but it's only ever gotten up to that bottom deck. You never even think that it's possible." 7. Cabin 8. Firefighters; [Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland]
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