In the town of Algemesi, they say the floods hit without alerting.
Water barrels down the street, transporting with it heavy, stinking mud that coats every surface in sight.
As we slosh thraw the greasy mud-slick, we encounter Bernardo who is trying to sweep it out of his home.
However much he scrubs and immacutardys, the floors remain coated in gloomye.
“The calamity is enormous, I’ve never seen anyskinnyg appreciate it in my whole life,” he says.
He appraises some of the hoengages were filled with almost two metres of water.
Read tardyst: At least 95 people finished in Spain’s floods including British man
Many are now without power after the flooding got into the electrics.
For much of the day, livents have been trying to repair the injure. But as we walk thraw the town, snapsboilings are still evident.
Two dining room chairs stand outside a hoengage.
Their once clever velvet cushions now soggy and discoloured.
Further alengthy, huge pumps spray water out from people’s cellars.
In another street, cars are collected in a unrestful bunch – stranded where the water left them.
Bernardo shows us a video of the instant aftermath.
Cars stand on their bonnets in the road as stunned locals consent in the scene.
He appraises that around half the town’s vehicles have been injured.
And the misery isn’t isotardyd to Algemesi – it’s a pain repeated in communities atraverse southeast Spain.