Flooding in TX Hill Country/Kerrville

Bull shit on the blame game! Knew it would flood my ass! Yeah once in 209 years! Should have known my ass
You’re fucking retarded, it’s floods way more than “once in 209 years”. Just in the last 20 years the Guadalupe has flooded at least 9 times. Of course your dumbass is from TN or some bullshit place and doesn’t know fuck about shit when it comes to flooding in central Texas. 90% of what you post is some retarded bullshit that’s not meant to be a joke. Go back to Facebook you stupid cunt.

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Interesting video driving up the river road to Camp Mystic. The scale of destruction is staggering.


Y'all arent the first and wont be the last. This is what Hurricane Camille did to Nelson County Virgini in 69. 25 inches of rain in 5 hours, in the mountains. My uncle who was a state police at the time told of being on S&R and finding just an arm sticking up out of the mud where someone had been buried. goold luck, and hope you get a break, looks like its still raining.





Hurricane Camille history

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Explore this photo album by Kipp Teague on Flickr ... Hurricane Camille damage in Lovingston, Virginia · Hurricane Camille
 

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Work crews pulled away from the water, this morning. If you witnessed the amazing work ethic of every single person, you’d have hope for America.
The effort is unrelenting, fresh people relieving worn out, who rest a bit and dig back in. More and heavier equipment, more groups arriving. Food, fuel mobilized, and housing provided for the many workers. Systems fine tuned as we learn to accommodate the influx. Tomorrow: back at it.
 
Work crews pulled away from the water, this morning. If you witnessed the amazing work ethic of every single person, you’d have hope for America.
The effort is unrelenting, fresh people relieving worn out, who rest a bit and dig back in. More and heavier equipment, more groups arriving. Food, fuel mobilized, and housing provided for the many workers. Systems fine tuned as we learn to accommodate the influx. Tomorrow: back at it.
We (at least used to be) at our best when tragedy strikes. As you said, there is hope.
 
Work crews pulled away from the water, this morning. If you witnessed the amazing work ethic of every single person, you’d have hope for America.
The effort is unrelenting, fresh people relieving worn out, who rest a bit and dig back in. More and heavier equipment, more groups arriving. Food, fuel mobilized, and housing provided for the many workers. Systems fine tuned as we learn to accommodate the influx. Tomorrow: back at it.
It has been something to see.