Colorado family hosts cookie stand to support flooded Texas camp

Anglo (KDVR) – After the fatal floods swept parts of Texas last week, the Colorado family ascends to help the camp that formed their lives for generations.

Hillary Peters Conway and her daughter Alice Rose hosted a position for the cookie profile on Thursday afternoon in Inglo, where they raised money for the Camp Mitik-is a well-known summer camp for girls in Texas that were damaged in the floods and forced to evacuate hundreds of the camp.

“I just decided to return the favor because we are very impotence,” Conway said. “We were only there on June 28 and we went home from the camp. I feel many isolation because I cannot be there for cleaning and help, so we decided to make cookies yesterday and re -this just because I want to be able to return the beautiful to everyone.”

Conway, the former Sufi cart and the advisor, said the camp was a pivotal for her family’s story.

“I was 14 years old, my daughter was six years old, and my daughter is there, they were there 8 and 10, and she was a consultant this year. My sister also attended a mystical, and it was just something that formed my life forever, and I could not go anywhere without someone knowing to the Sufi camp,” she said.

The pregnant woman has offered more than 200 “Tweety Eastland’s Secret Nex” profiles – a desirable camp.

Conway said: “It is a desirable recipe that you get in your first year as a consultant, and they bring joy to everyone.” “Tweety is one of the most people, they give humans in this world, so I just wanted to repeat this joy.”

Her daughter, Alice Rose, added, “Well, she is just a chocolate oat cookie, but she is special – and better.”

All donations will go to the official Camp Mystic Relief box, helping families and employees affected by the floods. The storm also destroyed the camp of the boys close, not Janta.

“I was really upset because it was really difficult for everyone,” said Alice Rose.

Her younger brother, James, repeated that emotion: “I felt terrifying.” But he said that collecting donations is a way to turn grief into work. “We can help them rebuild with the money we offer.”

The arrival of the Camp Mystic community spread beyond the neighborhood – the previous vehicle, Jenny Adolf, who did not know the family, attended to support the effort after seeing a post online.

Adolf said: “A friend sent me a Hillary post online, and I thought, my God, I have to go,” Adolf said. “Mystic everywhere – spirit, beauty and love – it’s great now after I found the Sufi people here.”

She said, despite the destruction, the spirit of the camp lasts.

She said: “There is a lot of love in the world, and you can take this love, spread it and give it to anyone.” “It will be surprising how mystic returns.”

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