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"THE RIVER HOUSE BROKE. WE RUSHED IN THE RIVER."
What follows is a first-hand account of a family that got tossed into the flash flood on the Guadalupe River, published by Texas Monthly magazine. I hope it doesn't give me nightmares. I have fond memories of lounging by and swimming in the Guadalupe during my college years in San Marcos, Texas. I look at them in a new light now.
THE RIVER HOUSE BROKE. WE RUSHED IN THE RIVER.
On July 4, the Guadalupe ripped our home from its pillars, pulling my family into its waters and into the night. Then morning came.
Rosemary, the four-year-old, woke up first. She told my brother-in-law, Lance, that there was something on the roof.
Seven of us were at my familys river house on the Guadalupe, between Ingram and Hunt, for the Fourth. Our little stretch of river is wide, green, cool, deep, and slow. It is some of the best swimming anywhere and one of the most beautiful spots in Texas, as far as Im concerned. Ive spent many peaceful afternoons there, floating and staring up at the cypress trees that tower over the water. The house, a one-story cabin on stilts about fifty yards from the river up our steeply sloped yard, was built right after the 1987 flood that devastated this region, killing ten teenagers. Concrete pillars put our familys place a few feet above what officials consider a one-hundred-year floodplain. More than once Id tried to imagine the waters rising that high, but it seemed impossible.
Wed had pizza for dinner and spent that Thursday evening playing hide-and-seek with Rosemary, a rambunctious, expressive, willful little girl with blond hair and blue eyes who can speak Spanish and calls me Tío, and her baby brother, my twenty-month-old nephew, Clay, a towhead whod just learned to say the words boo and yellow. After the kids went to sleep, a few of us played charades until about 9:30 p.m., when we all said goodnight and went to bed.
On July 4, the Guadalupe ripped our home from its pillars, pulling my family into its waters and into the night. Then morning came.
Rosemary, the four-year-old, woke up first. She told my brother-in-law, Lance, that there was something on the roof.
Seven of us were at my familys river house on the Guadalupe, between Ingram and Hunt, for the Fourth. Our little stretch of river is wide, green, cool, deep, and slow. It is some of the best swimming anywhere and one of the most beautiful spots in Texas, as far as Im concerned. Ive spent many peaceful afternoons there, floating and staring up at the cypress trees that tower over the water. The house, a one-story cabin on stilts about fifty yards from the river up our steeply sloped yard, was built right after the 1987 flood that devastated this region, killing ten teenagers. Concrete pillars put our familys place a few feet above what officials consider a one-hundred-year floodplain. More than once Id tried to imagine the waters rising that high, but it seemed impossible.
Wed had pizza for dinner and spent that Thursday evening playing hide-and-seek with Rosemary, a rambunctious, expressive, willful little girl with blond hair and blue eyes who can speak Spanish and calls me Tío, and her baby brother, my twenty-month-old nephew, Clay, a towhead whod just learned to say the words boo and yellow. After the kids went to sleep, a few of us played charades until about 9:30 p.m., when we all said goodnight and went to bed.
the rest is here.
https://russblib.blogspot.com
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"THE RIVER HOUSE BROKE. WE RUSHED IN THE RIVER." (Original Post)
RussBLib
Jul 11
OP
ultralite001
(1,891 posts)1. Beautiful... Terrifying...
Thank you for sharing...
NH Ethylene
(31,184 posts)2. Incredible story.
It really allows one to visualize what it was like. I like how the author ended it with happy memories for the little girl.
sheshe2
(92,906 posts)3. I am going to cry a bit now.
RIP little Clay You will live forever in your family's heart.