Search for missing continues on day 7
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Volunteers continue search efforts along the Guadalupe River after the Central Texas flooding, with some returning home after a week of emotional and exhausting work. Despite departures, new volunteers are stepping in,
A small group of North Carolina volunteers with five mules and one horse is helping transport supplies in the ongoing search and recovery operation in Texas.
Two aircraft from the space agency are surveying the disaster area after clouds obscured images from satellites.
Volunteers and professionals from around the country and Mexico are still searching the challenging terrain for victims of the Texas flood.
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The Texas Tribune on MSNAs Guadalupe River flows calm, evidence of its destructive force remainsHill Country residents and volunteers on Tuesday continued picking up the pieces that the deadly waterway left behind days earlier.
In Kerr County, Thad Heartfield is leading nearly 100 volunteers searching for flood victims. For him, this mission is personal. His son and three of his son's friends disappeared in the flood.
The day after deadly flooding swept through Central Texas on July 4, search and rescue efforts continued. Early Friday morning, heavy rains pushed the Guadalupe River at Hunt to its second-highest height on record,
Also: San Antonio mourned the victims in a Travis Park vigil; UTSA said one of its teachers died in the Guadalupe River flood; Kerrville officials said a privately owned drone collided with a helicopter conducting search and rescue operations.
SAN ANTONIO — Five days after the waters of the Guadalupe River rose and overwhelmed much of Kerr Country on July Fourth, search and recovery efforts continue as the community picks up the pieces of one of the state's worst natural disasters in years.