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Hurricane Helene Devastated This Running Hotbed. Professional Athletes Are Helping Rebuild It.

N.Thompson32 min ago

On a typical Tuesday, Abbey Cooper usually tackles a threshold workout before leading practice as the coach of a youth cross-country team in Boone, North Carolina.

Last week, the 2016 Olympic 5,000-meter runner was working as a volunteer, answering phones at her church, Alliance Bible Fellowship. For hours, the new mom helped survivors of Hurricane Helene obtain generators and other necessities in the wake of a natural disaster.

When Helene made landfall in Florida as a Category 4 storm on September 26, it created a 500-mile path of destruction across the southeast. Homes were washed away, roads were destroyed, and electricity was wiped out in communities across six states, where the death toll has risen to 227. Many are still unaccounted for or missing, according to The AP .

In the rural mountain towns of western North Carolina, the hurricane decimated communities with unrelenting rain and devastating floods . And emergency response was made more difficult due to hundreds of damaged roads and downed bridges.

Now as people begin to recover and rebuild, several elite runners in Boone and Blowing Rock, North Carolina, are taking major steps to give back and raise awareness for the organizations working tirelessly to support those in need. From cleaning up trails to delivering meals and disaster kits, professional and collegiate athletes who train in the area are providing critical aid and urging others to help in recovery efforts.

"We had no idea the gravity of what was coming"

Cooper, her husband, Jacob, and their 20-month-old daughter, Mercy, live in a valley about 15 minutes from downtown Boone. In the days leading up to the storm hitting their town on Friday, September 27, a downpour descended on the area. At the height of the storm, Cooper remembered seeing waterfalls flowing off the hill and rushing toward their house.

Though they had to dig a trench to reroute water that was flowing into their garage, there was minimal damage done to the Coopers' home. Cooper said they were lucky. One of their neighbor's homes located next to a creek was destroyed, but the owner made it out safely. "All of us were really humbled. We had no idea the gravity of what was coming," she said.

They lost power and water, relying on a portable camping stove and water filter to sustain them at home for three days. The couple considered driving to their friend's house in Raleigh but decided to stay after the power was turned back on.

Tristin Van Ord Colley had a similar terrifying experience at her home in Blowing Rock, located about eight miles from Boone. The professional marathoner, who runs for Zap Endurance, was in her apartment when a tornado hit the street behind her complex on Wednesday, September 25. Without receiving any warning of the tornado, the Appalachian State University alum and her husband, fellow pro runner Andrew Colley, took shelter last minute in a room without windows. The next day, the rain started to pick up. By Friday, it became catastrophic.

Tristin said Andrew was watching a teammate's dogs across town when water started flooding into the house. With the water rising rapidly and the electricity still on, Andrew fled with the dogs in his car and drove to their apartment. Tristin said he was forced to avoid road closures and drive through deep water as the storm progressed. "If [Andrew] had waited any longer, I'm not sure he would've been able to make it," she said.

Though the basement of their apartment building flooded up to four feet, the water didn't reach their unit on the second floor. After the power went out—and didn't turn back on for nine days—Tristin and Andrew braved the few roads that were open but riddled with fallen trees, to drive to her mom's house in Chapel Hill.

Recovering and rebuilding

Once they stabilized at home, Abbey and Jacob started volunteering with local relief efforts led by the Red Cross and Samaritan's Purse in partnership with their church. Jacob, who works as the Associate Athletics Director for Sports Psychology and Mental Wellness at Appalachian State, is making deliveries to families in need and serving meals at the university. Abbey is assisting with administrative work and serving food while fitting in base training mileage when she can.

"I'm really thankful that we're in a position to be okay and go help other people get their needs met," Cooper said.

In her training buildup for the New York City Marathon on November 3, Tristin was scheduled to race the Twin Cities 10 Mile race. When the Asheville airport closed, she and Andrew rerouted their flight to Raleigh, so they could make it to Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the race on October 5.

Though she was mentally and physically exhausted, Tristin focused on bringing her community with her to the competition. The day before the race, she wrote an Instagram post sharing her experience with the goal of raising awareness to the devastation affecting the area she's called home for many years.

"The people of Appalachia I feel are forgotten about a lot...Being someone who was extremely lucky in this situation, it's hard for me to watch this community that I've grown to love so much crumble because of poverty and maybe not being prepared or not warned," she said, while noting the messaging about the severity of the storm could have been better communicated in advance.

"It's important to have eyes on this area and have people recognize that these people here matter too."

Zap Endurance elite coach Peter Rea and his family are doing their part by volunteering at local churches and public schools, which have become distribution centers for aid since the hurricane hit. Rea, his wife—cofounder of Zap Endurance Zika Rea—and their two children are helping people get necessities, like diapers, toothpaste, bottled water, blankets, and hot meals in the aftermath of their homes getting destroyed.

The Rea family home saw minimal damage in Blowing Rock compared to other communities sitting at lower elevation, but four Zap runners were flooded from their houses, he said. Several of the athletes stayed with Rea immediately after the hurricane. They had to run on treadmills because the team's primary training venue, Moses H. Cone Memorial Park, was severely damaged from the storm.

"There are just hundreds of trees down in the national park on all of the carriage trails that we run on," Rea said. "A couple of our rolling dirt loops are completely flooded out. There's lots of housing destruction on the road because it's right next to the Watauga River, which went 12 feet over its banks."

Most of the team left Blowing Rock and Boone to continue their respective training blocks in their hometowns. Though the team is displaced right now, Rea has encouraged the athletes to stay connected as they pursue their running goals from afar. "We're trying to impress upon them to be excited about getting out the door everyday, and go out of your way to create community when you're back home," he said.

Rea is hoping the athletes will be able to return after the New York City Marathon in the first week of November, but only if it's safe to live in their homes and train.

A portion of the trail clean-up effort is being led by the cross-country team at Appalachian State. Seeing the widespread damage prompted the men's and women's squad to pick up trash blown onto the paths they utilize every day, said Appalachian State women's distance coach Annie Richards.

"As a distance runner, you're out running the trails or running around town, you really have a unique connection to the place," Richards said. "In some ways, it's harder because a lot of the trails that we've been running on have been really impacted by the storm, but also I think our team has been able to really understand the scope of the disaster."

Last week, the team volunteered to sort through donations and build disaster relief kits, which included items to help people kill mold in their home caused by water damage. Richards said they plan to do more volunteer projects while the team is in season for cross-country this fall.

Though the community has received aid from different organizations in town and around the country—Cooper said she got "chills" when she saw hundreds of camper vans belonging to volunteers who traveled many miles to assist—there's a long period of recovery ahead .

"The people of western North Carolina have never seen anything of this magnitude," Rea said. "Anything people can do to help is greatly appreciated."

To learn more about Hurricane Helene relief efforts and different ways to give back, visit the following nonprofit organizations recommended by runners in the area.

  • Samaritan's Purse

  • The nonprofit organization based in Boone is leading debris cleanup efforts to assist local homeowners.

  • American Red Cross

  • The national nonprofit organization provides disaster health services and shelter, among other resources.

  • Appalachian Medical Reserve Corps

  • The national network of community organized volunteer units is coordinating volunteers with state and national emergency response teams in western North Carolina.

  • Wine to Water

  • The nonprofit based in Boone provides clean water amid disaster relief.

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