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Texas Flooding

A flood killed his entire family in 2015. Now he has joined the search in Texas.

Jonathan McComb was the sole family member to survive similar floods in 2015. Since then, he has found a calling searching for others after deadly natural disasters.

Portrait of Rick Jervis Rick Jervis
USA TODAY
July 7, 2025Updated July 9, 2025, 10:38 a.m. ET
  • Jonathan McComb lost his wife and children in 2015 flooding in Wimberly, Texas, 80 miles east of Kerrville.
  • Since then, he felt called to join search-and-rescue efforts in Texas.
  • Now, he's in Kerrville helping search for victims of the July 4 flooding.
  • As of July 7, the flooding in Central Texas has killed at least 90 people.

KERRVILLE, Texas – For nearly a week, Jonathan McComb has climbed into inflatable Zodiac rafts or hiked along the flood-scarred banks of the Guadalupe River, poking through brambles and uprooted trees, looking for victims. 

He works from sunrise to sundown. It’s relentless, tedious, physically demanding work. And, as search and rescue turns to recovery, it can be soul-wrenching.  

McComb is one of hundreds of volunteers who have descended onto Kerr County in the wake of the deadly Independence Day floods here to help search for victims. 

But the task carries extra weight for McComb: He was the only one of his family to survive similar floods in 2015 in Wimberley, Texas, 80 miles east of Kerrville. Those floods destroyed about 400 homes and killed 13 people, including McComb’s wife and two children. They were swept from his grasp as the house they were in was pushed along the Blanco River and broke apart against a bridge. 

Jonathan McComb surveys the Guadalupe River at a staging area before heading out with a search-and-rescue team to look for victims of the recent Kerr County floods. McComb survived the 2015 floods in Wimberley, 80 miles east of Kerr County, but lost his wife and two children and vowed to help others if he survived.

On the morning of July 7, McComb, 45, gathered with about 20 members of TEXSAR, a search and rescue volunteer group based in Central Texas. On the banks of the Guadalupe – no longer destructive but still brown and swollen – the members discussed river currents and reminded one another to be careful with fallen branches and trees. As of that morning, the missing included at least 10 children attending a nearby Christian camp for girls.

Many of the volunteers were lending their expertise in search and rescue to a stricken community. For McComb, it was the fulfillment of a pact he struck with God while clinging to life in the raging Blanco River a decade ago. 

“This one hits a little bit more at home,” McComb said in an interview with USA TODAY. “I can see the hurt and the pain in the families. I know what they're going through and what they're feeling and what they're going to feel.”

‘The magnitude of this is in its own category’

Volunteers have streamed to Kerr County in the wake of the floods, some pulling skiffs on trailers behind trucks or with canoes strapped to the roofs of their SUVs. Authorities have asked volunteers to connect with a law enforcement agency before helping. 

TEXSAR alone has deployed 50 volunteers and six swift-water rescue boats, spokesperson Shannon Smith said. Over the years, TEXSAR teams have helped in hundreds of missions, from search and rescue in the wake of Hurricane Harvey in southeast Texas to rescuing lost hikers in the Guadalupe Mountains in West Texas. 

But few have compared to this disaster, Smith said. 

“The magnitude of this is in its own category,” she said. 

At least 100 people have died in flooding across Texas since July 4, authorities say. The worst of the flooding occurred here in Kerr County, but people have died in Travis, Burnet, Kendall, Tom Green and Williamson counties.  

The toll included at least 27 children and counselors from a beloved all-girls summer camp, the camp said in a statement, as a frantic search for those still missing entered its fourth day.

"Our hearts are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy," the private Christian camp, Camp Mystic, said in a statement on its website July 7. "We are praying for them constantly."

About 700 children were at the camp when relentless rain caused the nearby Guadalupe River to surge more than 26 feet in less than an hour, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said. Photos taken at the scene show a building where some of the children slept with broken windows and a blown-out wall. Among the mud-covered debris were pink blankets and stuffed animals.

‘I’ll tell your story and help others’

The images have reawakened painful memories for McComb. 

On Memorial Day weekend 2015, McComb, his wife, Laura, their son Andrew, 6, and daughter, Leighton, 4, were vacationing at a riverfront home in Wimberley with another family when the floods hit. The raging waters pushed the home off its foundation and sent it rushing down the Blanco River. 

The home smashed into a bridge and ripped apart, plunging people into the river. McComb witnessed his family swept away by the angry current as they slipped from his grasp, he said. 

Jonathan McComb (at left with cap) listens in as members of the TEXSAR volunteer search-and-rescue group discuss assignments before heading out to look for victims of the Texas floods. McComb vowed to help other victims of disasters when he survived the 2015 floods in Wimberley, 80 miles east of Kerr County.

He resigned to go as well and slipped under the waves. But something bumped his head and jolted him awake. He called on God. 

“I said, ‘All right, I'm going to get out of here, and I'll tell your story and help others,’” McComb remembered. 

About 11 miles downriver, McComb finally climbed out, scaled a steep cliff and walked to safety. He was the only one of the nine people in the home that night to survive. Leighton’s body was never recovered, he said. 

While recovering in the hospital, he learned that TEXSAR volunteers were looking for his family. He vowed to join the group as soon as he could. Later that year, he did. 

McComb has assisted in six missions with the group, including other weather events and helping find missing people. He has since remarried and has a 5-year-old daughter, Scarlett. He hugged her a little tighter before heading off to Kerr County. 

TEXSAR search-and-rescue volunteers scour the banks of the Guadalupe River, looking for victims of the recent floods. The group has deployed 50 volunteers and six swift-water rescue boats to help search for victims.

He arrived in Kerrville on the night of July 4 as the Guadalupe still roiled, joining search and rescue teams on Zodiac rafts. 

It has been a struggle, he said, to stay focused on the search while not letting his feelings distract him. 

“It’s a tug of war,” McComb said. “I’m here to help. But knowing we weren’t able to recover my daughter 10 years ago ... I know what that feels like. I want to do what I can to help.”

He climbed into a pickup with his team and rode off to a stretch of uprooted trees and tangled debris downriver. 

There were more people to find. 

How to volunteer

At a news conference, Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice asked that volunteers contact the Salvation Army Kerrville at 830-465-4797 or in person at 855 Hays St. in Kerrville. He also asked that private drone operators not fly in the disaster area.

Where to donate

Aid groups, nonprofits and other organizations are accepting donations to help survivors and assist in the recovery.

The Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country started the Kerr County Flood Relief Fund, which will provide aid to vetted organizations in Hunt, Ingram, Kerrville, Center Point and other areas. Crowdfunding website GoFundMe has an updated page for verified fundraisers connected to flood victims and their families.

Other organizations accepting donations include the World Central Kitchen and The Salvation Army, which is distributing supplies and has set up a mobile kitchen in the disaster area.

Reach Jervis at:[email protected], or follow him on X: @MrRJervis.

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