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Help Earthaven Ecovillage Recover from Hurricane Helene

Tax deductible
Click the small-type "Read More," below, to view our full story, and click "See Older Updates" to learn more about our response and recovery efforts.

Earthaven Ecovillage suffered severe impacts from Hurricane Helene. With 22+ inches of rainfall in 2-1/2 days, Hurricane Helene is the biggest storm this land has seen in Earthaven’s 30-year lifetime and well beyond it.


Hurricane Helene brought some of the highest rainfall, highest river levels, and most severe flooding ever observed across the region.


The damage in the region is extensive. Lives have been lost. Lots of homes, businesses, farms, and infrastructure are destroyed. Lots of ecological destruction. Lots of suffering. Many in Western North Carolina have lost everything.

The good news for us at Earthaven is, no one in our little mountain village was injured, and all of our residents are safe, fed and housed.

The heartbreaking news is, the creeks overflowed so much, so quickly, and with such force, that they wreaked damage on our ecovillage that will take months or years, and resources we do not have, to recover.

The flooding took out many of our roads and destroyed or severely compromised all three of our bridges. We've had damage to our water systems, off-grid power systems, and agriculture infrastructure. The ground became so saturated that huge trees fell, many of which blocked our roads and pathways, and some of which severely damaged one home and moderately damaged several others. Footbridges washed away, including one connecting a neighborhood to the Village Center, which was battered by rushing water into a pile of sticks and piled against a collapsed cement road bridge. Our Free Store for resource-sharing was displaced from its foundation and will need to be dismantled. Trees and landslides on both of the two roads leading to the ecovillage have limited our access and egress.




As we do, we have come together to organize and mobilize efforts towards restoring access, making sure everyone continues to have what they need to maintain health and safety, and assisting others in the surrounding community.




Admidst the devastation, people throughout the region are coming together around this shared experience, transcending ideological and other divides, to ensure the safety of all. We are seeing extraordinary examples of selfless service, rescue efforts, and strength within our local communities.

We are humbly reaching out to broaden our web of connection and support in this time of great need.

We need funds to help with the restoration efforts of basic access and systems (roads, bridges, and utility systems, agriculture repairs, buildings), as well as emergency response costs for food and supplies, and improvements to secure our access and off-grid utilities in preparation for future weather events. The infrastructure damage is unprecedented, and will take months of work to repair and upgrade for greater stability in future weather events.




While our roads, bridges, and other infrastructure are in disrepair, a primary source of community income — our in person workshops, retreats, tours, and venue rentals — must be canceled. This has major impacts on the ecovillage economy, since our educational events provide employment for a number of our members. Other sources of individual income — lodging rentals for temporary visitors, our plant nursery, and certain agricultural operations — are also interrupted. This limits the ability of our members to finance recovery work from our own resources.

We humbly ask for your support.

For updates on how your support is resulting in progress, please visit our facebook and sign up for our newsletter. If you prefer to donate through other means, you can do so on the donation page of our website. Supporters have asked if they can donate by mail, and the answer is now YES. Mail services have resumed. Checks can be made to Culture’s Edge and sent to: 5 Consensus Circle, Black Mountain, NC 28711.

We send our love and compassion to all those experiencing similar difficulty, challenge, and loss right now. May everyone have the support they need to navigate these wild and unprecedented times.

Our deep, abiding gratitude goes out to all who are working to provide assistance to those impacted by this extreme climate event and to those working on longer term climate change solutions.

Please share this GoFundMe to help Earthaven rebuild. Thank you!

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Earthaven is an aspiring ecovillage of 100 people, clustered in 14 neighborhoods, within 329-acres of mountain forests near Asheville, North Carolina. We are dedicated to caring for people and the Earth by learning, living, and demonstrating a holistic, regenerative culture.

Culture's Edge is a nonprofit organization based at Earthaven since 1996 and dedicated to supporting, demonstrating, and catalyzing the development of healthy, sustainable, and regenerative culture.
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Donations 

  • Garrett Redman
    • $100
    • 3 hrs
  • Scott Karas
    • $100
    • 1 d
  • Anonymous
    • $2,000
    • 3 d
  • Mary frank
    • $100
    • 4 d
  • Aaron Hamilton
    • $30
    • 4 d
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Fundraising team (7)

Carmen Lescher
Organizer
Black Mountain, NC
Culture's Edge
Beneficiary
Amy Belanger
Team member
Amy Belanger
Team member
Garrell Bevirt
Team member
Jackie Whitmire
Team member

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