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A simple flight home turned into a mission. When Hurricane Helene tore through the Gorge and border towns, our guest, volunteer organizer Shauna Toller, landed to a flood of messages and a community in need. What started with off-road friends checking on one another became a lifeline: scouting safe routes, organizing supply runs, sleeping in a Jeep, and building a rhythm that kept first responders supplied when access was cut and phones were dark.

We walk through the pivotal moments: setting up at Yancey County’s volunteer fire department, creating medical triage packs that freed nurses to focus on care, and transforming a damaged storefront in Bat Cave into a full-service relief hub with showers, staging, and a constantly updating map of who needed what. You’ll hear how a background in veterinary triage translated to human logistics, and why detailed checklists, morning briefings, and simple tools kept the effort moving when roads vanished and the river rose.

As headlines faded, the work shifted. Today the bottleneck isn’t willpower—it’s skilled trades. We talk framing, electrical, and plumbing that must meet code, guided by a licensed GC so families can return to safe, durable homes. Along the way, you’ll meet the true power of community-led recovery: neighbors who received help returning as volunteers, turning a pop-up camp into a locally owned, resilient network. If you have a trade, a truck, or time to coordinate, there’s a place for you in Bat Cave and throughout the Gorge.

If this story moves you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who can lend a hand, and leave a review to help more people find these hometown heroes. Your skill—or your signal boost—might be the link someone is waiting for.