On May 23, 2015 a massive storm system dumped as much as 13
inches of rain on the area feeding into the Blanco River, near Austin
Texas. The rushing rainwater quickly
became a “wall of water”. The river rose
36 feet in 4 hours; at one point, it rose 5 feet every 15 minutes. Before it returned to normal, more than
15,000 trees, 350 homes, and 11 lives were lost. More than 6,000 volunteers donated 47,000
hours helping with the recovery which is still on-going after almost 18
months. The Nomads and a couple of
other groups are still working here.
Our team is parked at a former church camp about 15 miles
out of town. We have 9 individuals in 5
rigs and are working on 2 homes. There
is room here to park 7 rigs and, after a short break for Christmas and New
Years, there is work planned through the end of March at least. There is that much work remaining to be done. We will be here for just this week only,
before moving on to Ozona, in west Texas for the next 3 weeks.
We have previously worked with 2 couples and a single woman
and just met one couple from Missouri.
It’s a nice combination of reconnecting with some folks and meeting new
folks. We will work for 2 ½ days this
week. On Wednesday we work ½ day and
then go out for lunch as some people will be leaving. We plan on working Wednesday afternoon to
decorate for a community Thanksgiving dinner in Wimberley. We will attend that dinner on Thursday.
Happy Thanksgiving!!
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