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one Texas summer camp Camp officials noted that about 70 children and adults were evacuated near the Guadalupe River earlier on July 4.
The 500-acre Presbyterian Convention is a recreational destination for summer camps, as well as youth meetings for churches across the United States, located at the source of the river and has been monitoring the situation for 24 hours, Mo-Ranch Communications Director Lisa Winters Lisa Winters lisa Winters. Tell Kens5.
According to the Associated Press, it was around 1 a.m. Friday, facilities manager Aroldo Barrera informed his boss that he had been monitoring the report of the storm.
Despite no warning from local authorities, camp officials in Mo-Ranch took quick action on their own, relocating about 70 children and adults to spend the night in the riverside buildings. Camp leaders, including President and CEO Tim Huchton, avoided the disaster that hit at least another camp near Hunter, Texas, while the kids were safe.
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Volunteers search for missing persons on the Guadalupe River after flooding in Hunt, Texas on Sunday, July 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Rodolfo Gonzalez)
“They helped them clean up,” Winters told the Associated Press on Sunday. “They lifted them up, took them out, and placed them on a higher ground.”
It’s even worse elsewhere. Before dawn on Friday, mountain floods spread across the country of Mount Texas, destroying the landscape near the river and leaving more than 80 dead and dozens of people not eliminated. As of Sunday, officials said 10 people were from The mysterious camp nearby Still missing. The rescue and recovery team tidied the area for them and still remained unphased in the following days.
“We have a lot of blessings and advantages to put people on the higher ground,” Winters told Kens5 on Saturday. “We are making plans, changing plans, and lifting people to higher ground ahead of schedule last night.”
Mo-Ranch has been hosting hundreds of campers, hundreds of people at conferences, and regular guests on holiday weekends there, all of which are occupied, she said. She explained that the camp had no power.
“Mo-Ranch is a Christian-based camps, Winters told Kens that we prepare our kids for being strong, stay resilient and believe they can move forward. “The irony part, this is the Big Youth celebration I attended last night – we just changed the plan because we knew something was coming – the whole theme was stress and anxiety, the stress and anxiety that gave the kids, and how to hit it and how powerful it was. They just put it in place and then pulled it together.”
“I can’t say there is no anxiety. I wasn’t there when it happened. But everyone is ready. Everyone is strong. Everyone can do it safely.”
The decision to abandon the decision increases how camps in the area and how residents in the area make their own decisions without a county warning or notice.
Local authorities face rigorous scrutiny, sometimes biased to questions about how many warnings they have or what they can provide to the public, according to the Associated Press, saying the comments will be made later. Currently, they say they are focusing on rescue. Officials said they did not expect such a strong downpour, equivalent to months of rainfall in the area.

Take in the view of Mystic Camp after a flash flood in Hunt, Texas on July 5, 2025. (Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images)
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Winters told the Associated Press that Mo-Ranch did not get direct information about the floods from county officials that could and did take lives.
“We don’t have any warnings,” Winters said, adding that it would be “destructive” if camp officials didn’t look at weather reports and rising rivers.
“Mo-Ranch” performed well in advance and they did something about it. ”
Winters told Kens there were hundreds of camps along the Guadalupe River, while Mo-Ranch was on the top of the cliffs in Hunt.
By 7 a.m. Friday, camp staff began contacting the children’s parents and told them that their children were safe.
“They know those parents will wake up and see only all the media footage of losing their kids or rivers,” Winters told the Associated Press. “They are like, ‘Tell your parents you’re okay’ … we make sure every kid, every kid is explained.”

Views of the interior of the cottage located in Mystic Camp in Riverside Summer Camp, Texas. (Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images)
Winters said the camp was located on the ground in the area and the camp suffered some losses but no other losses.
“The building doesn’t matter,” she said. “I can’t imagine losing a child or a person.”
The sturdy aluminum kayak is wrapped around the trees, like pretzels, she said.
“That just shows you pure The power of water. I don’t know how anyone can survive. We are lucky,” she said.
The camp remains closed on Sunday, and Mo-Ranch is working to help other camps affected by the flood.
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“We are in a difficult place because others do suffer,” Winters, who was excited in the interview, told the Associated Press. “We are the sisters of the camp. We take care of each other.”