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Texas teen describes harrowing escape from floodwaters near Guadalupe River: 'There was nowhere to go'
Texas teen describes harrowing escape from floodwaters near Guadalupe River: 'There was nowhere to go'

Daily Mail​

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • Daily Mail​

Texas teen describes harrowing escape from floodwaters near Guadalupe River: 'There was nowhere to go'

A teenager shared her harrowing escape from rising floodwaters which tore through Texas during the Fourth of July holiday weekend. Riata Schoepf, 19, waded through chest-deep waters in the dead of night before she was rescued by a group of strangers who had found respite on the second floor of a two-story home. The Good Samaritans threw down a sheet when they saw Schoepf and her group in the rapid moving waters, hoisting her and the others to safety. Schoepf recalled the harrowing experience to NBC News, beginning about 2.30am on Friday, July 4, when she received a knock on her door from hotel staff telling her she must evacuate. 'We walked outside and the water was up to bottom floor doors. It was insane. It just came out of nowhere.' She, along with most other hotel guests, ran to her car but found herself stuck in unmoving traffic as water lapped at her car door. 'We were just sitting in the car and then you start seeing all the water rising slowly and then it starts getting faster and faster.' Everyone was trying to leave out the same two exits, both of which ran through water crossings, which were already swelling with water and all but blocked. 'We were at a standstill,' she said. 'At this point, there's nowhere else for us to go.' Schoepf then noticed people around her were fleeing their cars and decided to join them. 'We started walking down the street and as you're walking you get the water rising higher and higher,' she said. Finally, as the water began lapping at her chest, Schoepf passed by a two-story house where people on the top floor were using flashlights to see into the fast moving waters below. 'As we were walking by once the water was up close to our chests they were screaming at us to come up because the current was just pulling more and more people in,' she said. 'They let down sheets for us and we started climbing up.' She recalled two men who risked their lives to push people up the sheet, going out into the dangerous waters to bring more people to safety. She said they pulled both people and dogs up to safety, leading to about 45 or 50 people cramped into the space. Everyone in her group who abandoned their cars survived and sought shelter on the roof, but she later learned that others who had opted to stay in the traffic to cross the bridge out of the hotel hadn't made it. Schoepf had tried to text her father during her daring escape, but the lack of reception in the area meant her messages weren't going through. She said messages she had sent him between 4am and 5am detailing the rising floodwaters and her perilous journey actually didn't reach him until closer to 8am. 'It was extremely difficult,' she said. In hard-hit Kerr County, searchers have found the bodies of 84 people, including 28 children, according to officials. The death toll is now at least 104 deaths across central Texas and expected to continue to rise.

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