Texas dad’s heartbreaking voicemail to his kids as deadly floods swept him and wife away

As floodwaters surged through central Texas last Friday, a father’s final moments were marked by a desperate act of love that now haunts those he left behind.

Jeff Ramsey, 61, and his wife Tanya, 46, were asleep in their Airstream trailer at HTR RV Park in Kerrville when the Guadalupe River rapidly overflowed. In the pre-dawn chaos, a wall of water tore through the site, demolishing everything in its path. But before it consumed their trailer, Jeff picked up his phone.

He knew there might be no way out. Still, he made one final call — not to seek help, but to say goodbye.

“Buddy. I love you so much. It doesn’t look like we are going to make it. Tell Rachey I love her,”

Jeff said in a voicemail left for his son Jake. The panic in Jeff’s voice was unmistakable — something Jake told the *New York Post* he had never heard from his father before.
Then Jeff left another message for his daughter, Rachel. In the background, as the floodwaters crashed in, Tanya’s screams filled the recording.

“We’re dying, we’re dying!”

It was the last time anyone would hear from them.

Jake later discovered that an emergency alert from the RV park had arrived — but only after the trailer was already gone. The timing was cruel. Jeff had already begun recording his goodbye by the time the evacuation notice came through.

But even in his final moments, Jeff tried to help others. He called Tanya’s brother and mother, who were staying in a nearby cabin. That call woke them up. The structure they were in was later found completely destroyed.

“He rescued them because they would have slept in and they would have washed away,”

Jake said.

“He saved their lives.”

Tanya’s body was recovered and identified by her tattoos. Jeff remains missing.

Jake and Rachel say Tanya was more than a stepmother — she was simply their mom. A breast cancer survivor, Tanya managed a wig shop in Dallas, supporting other women through treatment and recovery. Jeff, meanwhile, was a longtime insurance salesman and dedicated volunteer at the Adaptive Training Foundation, a gym in Dallas that helps amputees and individuals with physical challenges rebuild strength and mobility.

Jeff’s friend, Morris Brossette, paid tribute to him on Facebook:

“You will be hard pressed to find a man with a bigger servant’s heart… Rest easy my brother, we will carry your name on with love and light.”

Amid the devastation, the family found one small miracle. Chloe, the couple’s beloved rescue whippet, was found alive at a local shelter.

Still, the grief is raw. Jake says his father’s death was preventable — and he’s frustrated that lives were lost because of delayed warnings.

“The only thing I’m aware of that was done was my dad was sent a text after it was already too late,”

he said.

“He already said goodbye to me and my sister.”

At a memorial service, Jake spoke with Texas state Sen. Tan Parker, who assured him that changes to the alert system would be made. But Jake says the damage is done.

In a storm that left more than 100 dead across Texas, Jeff Ramsey’s voice lives on — not just as a farewell, but as a symbol of a father’s love that refused to stay silent, even in the face of catastrophe.

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