Texas A&M Forest Service worker in white hard hat and yellow shirt uses a chainsaw to cut up fallen trees

Debris from trees littered the road. Branches, trunk shards and sometimes entire trees, roots and all, created hazards for drivers and caused damage to nearby structures and infrastructure.

Sawdust floated to the ground like allergy-laden snowflakes amid the fallen trees as Texas A&M Forest Service workers used chainsaws to cut trees into manageable sections and clear roads across Montgomery County.

The cause was Hurricane Beryl, which made final landfall as a Category 1 hurricane July 8 in Matagorda and was later downgraded to a tropical storm as it moved up into East Texas, leaving behind a path of debris. Besides the downed trees, Hurricane Beryl’s storm damage also included downed power lines, major flooding, long gas lines and crop injury. At its peak, nearly 3 million homes and businesses in the Houston area were without power.

Helping Texans recover

The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service Disaster Assessment and Recovery, DAR, unit responded as the storm moved through the state to support residents and agricultural producers. DAR agents are conducting agricultural damage assessments on farms and ranches, including crops, livestock and infrastructure, in affected counties.

The Texas A&M Forest Service and DAR unit work in partnership with the Texas Division of Emergency Management, part of The Texas A&M University System. DAR is part of The Texas A&M University System’s Keeping Texas Prepared initiative.

Members of a community move pieces of a fallen tree out of a residential street
A man in a white hard hat and yellow shirt uses a chainsaw to cut up a fallen tree in front of a home
Texas A&M Forest Service employee with white hard hat and yellow shirt uses chainsaw to cut up fallen trees while sawdust flies across the picture