The rescue of the floods of the Texas woman took the camera after Waters swept away 20 miles

An unnamed woman of Texas, 22, was rescued this weekend after the devastating floods of the Guadalupe river swept 2 miles over four hours before clinging to a tree and cried to get help. A Texas family saw her and helped introduce the rescue, reported Fox News on Sunday, with what the network presented as an “incredible video” of the moment taken on a band.
The throwing family spoke to the press organization of the experience, which started while they evacuated their own house. “We had not completely evacuated – our house as just on the river – but we are at close 25 feet … and flood waters were showing up,” Patriarch Carl told Fox News. “I had traveled about half a step of houses in the street where I could still look, but I was on dry land.”
Look at the news segment on women’s rescue via Fox News below:
“As soon as the water stopped getting up and started back a little, I got waded, I got on my bridge. And as I did, she spotted me, and she started to cry for help,” he continued. “At the beginning, I couldn’t locate her – I thought she was in the river herself downstream … And then I was finally able to look through the river in the tree and I spotted it. So I started calling her and telling her that I see her. I got you, we’re going to bring you help. It’s going to go, hang up. “
The woman told the point of sale that she had been separated from her family, who was still missing at the time of the report. The refrigerators and other debris in the water failed it before it was saved.
The rescue effort involved “multiple teams,” said Josh throwing. “There was a quick water rescue of the Bernie team, in Texas, which presented itself, then there were guards of game of parks and wild animals from Texas who also presented themselves with boats.”

“We were able to help throw these boats in hand in the water so that they can enter and save it,” he added. “It was just … You didn’t think about it, you just did what you had to do to help them enter the water to save this young woman who clings to life in a tree.”
At least 80 people, including dozens of young girls who attend a summer camp in the region, died during the sudden flood. Ten girls and a Mystic camp advisor are always brought to count.
Governor Greg Abbott also warned state residents that more sudden floods were on the way.
Questions surrounding emergency preparation were raised following devastation. CNN reported that Kerr county officials have already debated the installation of flood warning sirens nine years ago (and once again that recently in 2021), but did not make the plan. “We don’t have a warning system,” Kerr Rob Kelly’s county judge said on Friday at a press conference.
Watch Fox News’ interview with the family throwing in the video above.