Guard continues to assist flood victims in Colorado

By Sgt. 1st Class Jon Soucy, National Guard BureauSeptember 23, 2013

Offloading Pallets of Water
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Staff Sgt. Lynda Santiago, a supply sergeant with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 147th Brigade Support Battalion, Colorado Army National Guard, uses a forklift to offload pallets of water during relief and recovery operations at Fort Collins,... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Flying Relief, Recovery Operations in Colorado
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Chief Warrant Officer Troy Parmley, a pilot with Delta Company, 3rd Battalion, 148th Aviation Regiment, Colorado Army National Guard, views floodwaters from recent rainfall from a UH-72 Lakota helicopter during relief and recovery operations near For... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

WESTMINSTER, Colo. (Sept. 20, 2013) -- More than 750 members of the Colorado National Guard continue to respond to flooding throughout the central Colorado area and for many, taking part in the effort is something that's left an indelible mark.

"I didn't know Mother Nature could be that wicked up there in the mountains, [with] the way the flood waters came through," said Pfc. Tyler Grandbouche, who serves with the state's B Company, 147th Brigade Support Battalion. "It's pretty treacherous."

That point was especially seen when Grandbouche and other members of his unit began assisting residents of Lyons, Colo., one of the areas hit hardest by the floods.

"In Lyons, before you even get to the town, there's a washed out road and you can actually see underneath where they had reinforced concrete," said Grandbouche, adding that he was surprised to learn that the flowing water that washed out the road wasn't the river's normal path.

"The river itself actually flowed behind the town and that was just where the river wanted to go and there was just so much water that it did whatever it was going to do without regard to what was in the way," he said.

As the Soldiers moved further into town, Grandbouche said he was even more surprised by what he saw.

"The destruction was just amazing. Nothing could have stopped that water and what it did," he said. "Just seeing where houses and cars ended up -- in trees and houses just completely demolished -- it was something to behold for sure."

"We had no idea what to expect, but every bend in the road going up the canyon is completely washed out," said Chief Warrant Officer 4 Mike Eger, a helicopter pilot with the Guard's 2nd Battalion, 135th Aviation Regiment. He flew a number of missions to extract local residents from flooded areas or to move in first responders.

"There're houses in the middle of the river, cars overturned, fire trucks that are stuck that came up during the initial search and rescue," he said. "Houses have slid into the river and everybody (in many of the flooded areas) is just cut off."

For Eger, working with local first responders was critical to ensuring those who needed help received it.

"Basically, with each community they've got little local fire stations up and down the river," he said. "Each one of those would muster all the folks they could in their area. They would organize the people and their pets. We would put them in the helicopter and just come back and forth until we had completely cleaned out the neighborhoods."

Working with local first responders was instrumental in other ways as well.

"We'd land and pick up local law enforcement, local volunteer firemen, and fly those folks around their community they knew very well and they would tell us where the elderly or the sick people were and we'd drop some oxygen bottles off or maybe just go in and hoist them out of their neighborhoods," said Eger.

For Grandbouche, his mission in Lyons was similar.

"Our main objective was search and extraction," he said. "We actually took units up into the treacherous waters where normal vehicles couldn't pass -- we have the high-rise vehicle. We would take them up there and they would go to houses and search for people and animals and make sure that anybody and everybody from the town was safe."

Grandbouche said his unit often worked with members of local and state rescue agencies.

The destructive power of the water continued to amaze Grandbouche.

"I never thought that without a hurricane or a tsunami that water could have been this treacherous to people," he said.

But he was also amazed, he said, with just how grateful many in the affected areas were.

"We're out there to help them and in many cases we show up to a house to pull people out and they're making you sandwiches," he said. "The gratitude they showed us when we showed up was remarkable. They were happy to see we were out there to help them with whatever it was they needed."

The experience affected Grandbouche in other ways.

"It made me heartbroken for the people who lost everything," he said. "I'm sure a lot of people up there, the majority of people, lost everything they had, their whole livelihood up there in the mountains. There's not too much you can say to somebody who has lost everything."

Many Soldiers did small things as a way to try and make things a little easier for those affected by the floods.

"I tried to do what I could to make things a little better, especially for the kids," said Staff Sgt. Lynda Santiago, a supply sergeant with the state's Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 147th BSB. She said her role was to make sure supplies, such as water, were on hand at Fort Collins, where many of the extracted were brought.

"I got some chem lights -- glow sticks -- and showed them how you break them in the center to get them to light up and they ran around playing with them," she said. "I also gave them small flags and other things, just whatever I could to brighten things up."

For a citizen-Soldier, it came down to simply trying to help where she could.

"I can really empathize," she said. "Many have nothing to go back to and you just help out where you can."

And that ties into what many Soldiers who responded hoped to accomplish.

"What I really hope we've accomplished out here is just giving people hope and peace of mind that whenever something does go wrong that there will always be people there to help them," said Grandbouche.

Related Links:

VIDEO: Soldiers Update - Colorado Floods

Colorado National Guard

Army News Service

Soldiers rescue more than 2,100 from Colorado floods

Military flood evacuation mission continues in Colorado

Army.mil: Humanitarian Relief Efforts - Flood

Army.mil: National Guard News

Facebook Army News Service

National Guard Bureau

Colorado National Guard on Facebook