Ratickle
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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Heavy rains in Central and South Texas led to a frightening scene for a couple who was rescued by a helicopter Thursday after their SUV was swept away by floodwaters and left them clinging to trees for hours.
The National Weather Service said more than a foot of rain fell in Central Texas, including up to 14 inches in Wimberley, since rainstorms began Wednesday.
"It looks to be one of the worst areas with the heaviest rainfall totals," said NWS meteorologist Steve Smart said as storms began moving to the east Thursday.
The storm system stretches from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast and carries heavy rain and strong winds. In Texas, Houston motorists also were slowed Thursday morning by heavy rain, which caused flooding in some areas.
Austin and its surrounding communities saw numerous rescues, officials said, but none like that in Buda, about 10 miles south of the capital city.
Around 4 a.m. Thursday, emergency personnel received calls from people living near Little Bear Creek about somebody screaming for help, Buda Fire Department Chief Clay Huckaby said.
Rescuers spotted a man and his girlfriend in trees about 200 yards downstream from the roadway they'd been driving their SUV on, he said.
"The water was over the road by about 15 feet by the time we arrived at the scene. They were about 10 feet above the water line hanging from trees," Huckaby said.
http://news.yahoo.com/more-foot-rain-falls-during-texas-storms-150356958.html
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Heavy rains in Central and South Texas led to a frightening scene for a couple who was rescued by a helicopter Thursday after their SUV was swept away by floodwaters and left them clinging to trees for hours.
The National Weather Service said more than a foot of rain fell in Central Texas, including up to 14 inches in Wimberley, since rainstorms began Wednesday.
"It looks to be one of the worst areas with the heaviest rainfall totals," said NWS meteorologist Steve Smart said as storms began moving to the east Thursday.
The storm system stretches from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast and carries heavy rain and strong winds. In Texas, Houston motorists also were slowed Thursday morning by heavy rain, which caused flooding in some areas.
Austin and its surrounding communities saw numerous rescues, officials said, but none like that in Buda, about 10 miles south of the capital city.
Around 4 a.m. Thursday, emergency personnel received calls from people living near Little Bear Creek about somebody screaming for help, Buda Fire Department Chief Clay Huckaby said.
Rescuers spotted a man and his girlfriend in trees about 200 yards downstream from the roadway they'd been driving their SUV on, he said.
"The water was over the road by about 15 feet by the time we arrived at the scene. They were about 10 feet above the water line hanging from trees," Huckaby said.
http://news.yahoo.com/more-foot-rain-falls-during-texas-storms-150356958.html