Two days before the Guadalupe River rose with terrifying speed and force in Kerr County, Texas, a small team from a California company called Rainmaker took off in a plane and released 70 grams of silver iodide into a cloud. Their purpose was simple on paper: encourage rainfall in a dry stretch of Texas. But within hours of the Fourth of July flood that killed at least 135 people, including dozens of children, that routine operation became the center of a storm no one could have predicted.
The video clips from that night tell one story. Rising water swallowing cars. Families climbing to rooftops. Sirens wailing in the distance. Four inches of rain falling in an hour, the river surging 26 feet in less than 45 minutes. Yet the conversations online tell another. Accusations spread with the floodwater. Questions about cloud seeding turned into viral posts. Prominent figures demanded answers.
One of the loudest voices was Pete Chambers, a former U.S. special forces commander, who wrote on X asking when cloud seeding had last been done. His post drew millions of views. Michael Flynn, a former national security advisor, reposted it with a comment that fueled speculation further. Soon, the name Rainmaker was everywhere — linked in headlines, hashtags, and message boards to the tragic flood in Texas Hill Country.
Rainmaker’s team had in fact been operating 125 miles southeast of Kerr County two days before the flood. They reported flying at 1,600 feet, dispersing a small amount of silver iodide — about the size of a handful of candy — into clouds that already held moisture. Soon after, meteorologists told them to stop operations because of shifting weather patterns, and they did.
Independent scientists stepped in as the theories grew. They explained that cloud seeding does not create new clouds; it only works with existing ones and has effects measured in minutes, not days. Daniel Swain of the University of California said the rainstorm that hit Kerr County involved far more water than cloud seeding has ever been shown to produce. Andrew Dessler of Texas A&M added that the flood was driven by a tropical disturbance in the Gulf, not by human intervention.
Well…this is weird…
A company called Rainmaker, conducted a cloudseeding mission on July 2nd over Texas Hill Country.
2 days later, the worst flood in their history occurred…in the exact same area that the Rainmaker flights were.
The entire goal of Rainmaker is to… pic.twitter.com/PtcES8lNCo
— Jordan Crowder (@digijordan) July 8, 2025
Still, the story was already gaining momentum. Congressman Marjorie Taylor Greene announced plans to introduce a bill that would make cloud seeding and other weather modification practices a felony, saying no one should be allowed to change the weather by any means. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency responded by launching new websites aimed at answering public questions about weather modification and geoengineering, noting that such practices have existed in the United States since the 1940s.
For Rainmaker, which has worked with several state and local governments on small-scale water projects, the scrutiny was swift. CEO Augustus Doricko expressed concern about how quickly speculation turned into blame, saying the company follows strict reporting requirements and that its actions could not have caused the storm.
WOW. Fox News just did an entire segment on Cloud Seeding and weather modification, going as far as to acknowledge the fact that it was occurring around the time of the Texas floods.
Now. The black pillers will say that the CEO of Rainmaker Tech denied any effects from their… pic.twitter.com/5omQXIVw4W
— NewsTreason Channel 17 (@NewsTreason) July 9, 2025
Yet as the Guadalupe River recedes, the larger debate continues to rise. How much control do humans really have over the weather? What limits should be placed on technology that can alter rainfall? And after a flood that left a region in mourning, what else might surface that no one expects?
Augustus Doricko, CEO of “Rainmaker” a cloud seeding company, discusses the Texas floods.
His largest project produced 10 million gallons of rain and states that he sees no evidence that cloud seeding caused this catastrophic flooding. The storm dumped 4 TRILLION gallons of water… pic.twitter.com/Vkmj51NBB4— Bama_Jeans (@bamajayt) July 8, 2025














WOW. Fox News just did an entire segment on Cloud Seeding and weather modification, going as far as to acknowledge the fact that it was occurring around the time of the Texas floods.
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