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HORRIFYING pictures show the aftermath of the Texas floods that have claimed dozens of lives and left girls attending a summer camp missing.
At least 90 bodies have been recovered since deadly rains washed over the Guadalupe River outside San Antonio over the July 4th holiday weekend.
One of the worst-hit areas was Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp located dangerously close to the flooding shores.
Ten girls and a counselor attending the camp are still missing. They make up a heart-wrenching portion of the 41 people who are unaccounted for across the state.
What we know so far…
Now-terrifying pictures of the flooding aftermath at Camp Mystic show piles of abandoned sleeping bags strewn across the open-air cabins.
Bunkbeds were left askew by the rushing waters and everything inside the buildings was covered with layers of mud and sediment.
Survivors of the tragedy have started to open up about the chaotic mission to escape the waters after being surprised by the flash floods early Friday morning.
Glenn Juenke, a security guard at the camp, said that he had to throw girls on top of floating mattresses to save them from drowning.
But despite witnessing the death and destruction, he said he was struck by the “courage and faith” shown by the young girls.
“Each of those sweet girls [were] cold, wet, and frightened – but they were also incredibly brave,” he told CNN.
“They trusted me, and we leaned on each other through a long, harrowing night together inside their cabin.”
SURVIVING CAMPER SPEAKS
Callie McAlary, a 16-year-old camper, described the terrifying moment she realized that this wasn’t a normal thunderstorm.
“One minute you see lightning strike next to your cabin, and next to you, you hear water’s coming up,” she told Fox News.
Callie said that she watched in horror as girls rushed across the campgrounds to try to get into cabins that weren’t being filled with water.
“It was really bad thunder,” she said.
“We heard one of the campers run in and say, ‘hey, our cabin is flooding.’
“I knew some girls slept on trunks that night, some girls had to share beds, some girls slept on floors because they couldn’t go back to their cabin because it was so flooded in three cabins.”
As the water rose in the middle of the night, Callie said she decided to put a name tag on her body in case her cabin was “next.”
“In my head I was saying, ‘If something does happen, and I do get swept away, at least I’ll have my name on my body.'”
Callie’s family is from Texas, but they now live in Virginia. Her parents said that they wanted to send her to Camp Mystic so she could stay in touch with her roots.
Tara Bradburn, Callie’s mother, said that she was overwhelmed by how much the staff did to try and protect the girls.
“What the men and the staff and the Eastland family did to try and help everyone that they could – they are heroes,” she told Fox News.
“And those young girls and those young counselors that our young girls were under for the summer were remarkable and were brave and were strong and saved so many children.”