Be a Steward of Transformation

The end-grain cross-section of a Hurricane Helene–salvaged hardwood log marked with a brass dedication plaque reading 'Echoes of the Forest 2025 Project Collection — Echoes of yesterday, Rooted in tomorrow' — the type of permanent recognition that accompanies each sponsored installation along the memorial woodworking trail in Western North Carolina

How sponsoring an Echo creates lasting impact for the artisans, communities, and generations who carry Western North Carolina's story forward.

Across Western North Carolina, woodworkers are bending over salvaged white oak and walnut, drawing chainsaws across hardwood, planing, sanding, finishing — turning what Hurricane Helene took down into something that will stand for generations. Each Echo is a piece of public art, but it's also a bridge: between a tree and a community, an artisan's livelihood and the visitors who'll sit on a bench fifty years from now.

These pieces need patrons. The artisans need partners. And the long story of this region's recovery needs people willing to write themselves into it.

The Scale of What Was Lost

Helene damaged 821,906 acres of forestland across 39 counties, with $59.6 billion in regional economic losses. Roughly 78% of the forest damage occurred on private lands — affecting individual craftspeople who source their materials from the woods around them. The work of recovery isn't abstract. It's the daily labor of people we know, in places we can name.

Aerial drone view of a Western North Carolina hillside after Hurricane Helene — hundreds of mature hardwood trees felled across a forested ridge, with a single white truck visible on a cleared dirt road for scale, illustrating the magnitude of the September 2024 storm's impact on regional forestland
Aerial view of a WNC hillside after Helene — the scale of forest loss across the region.

The Human Face of Recovery

Consider the story of Mark Oliver and Foundation Woodworks in Asheville's River Arts District. Two weeks before Helene, Mark and his fellow woodworkers had hosted a fundraising auction for MANNA Food Bank — their gallery filled with donated artwork for the cause. On September 27, 2024, that gallery and MANNA's warehouses both disappeared under 24 feet of floodwater from the French Broad River.

The interior of MANNA Food Bank's Asheville warehouse after Hurricane Helene's floodwaters receded — pallets of food destroyed, mud caked across the floor, and a banner visible reading 'Providing food with hope and dignity to Western North Carolina since 1983'
MANNA Food Bank's warehouse after the French Broad floodwaters receded — September 2024.

When the waters receded, Mark found his woodshop and gallery transformed into crumbling walls, destroyed equipment, and artwork covered in toxic mud. The gallery entrance had collapsed. Walls were missing from the back studios. For a stretch of days, it seemed the building might be condemned entirely.

The exterior of Foundation Woodworks gallery in Asheville's River Arts District after Hurricane Helene receded — the entrance collapsed, broken windows lying flat on the porch, cinder block walls toppled, debris strewn across the front, yellow caution tape across the property, and a saw graphic still visible on the front planter from the gallery's pre-flood signage
Foundation Woodworks after the flood — entrance collapsed, walls toppled.
Mark Oliver, woodworker and Echoes of the Forest artisan, at the front desk of Foundation Woodworks' temporary tent gallery in Asheville's River Arts District — surrounded by his handcrafted wood pieces, framed prints, and Foundation Woodworks T-shirts displayed for sale, after the original gallery was destroyed in the Hurricane Helene flood
Mark Oliver at Foundation Woodworks' temporary tent gallery, post-Helene.

But Mark and his community didn't give up. More than 100 volunteers showed up to shovel mud and tear walls down to the studs. They spent weeks cleaning and cataloging hundreds of recovered artworks. Today, while Foundation Woodworks operates from a temporary tent gallery provided by Operation Blessing, Mark continues creating — and now channels that experience into memorial pieces for the Echoes of the Forest trail.

Mark Oliver kneeling with his family beneath the new Foundation Woodworks tent gallery banner in Asheville's River Arts District, two young children holding the red ribbon and scissors at the official reopening ceremony — staff and supporters smiling alongside as the gallery officially reopens after the Hurricane Helene flood
The Foundation Woodworks ribbon-cutting — official reopening of the new tent gallery in Asheville's River Arts District.

This is why stewardship matters. Artisans like Mark aren't just recovering — they're translating their experience into public art that helps a whole community heal.

The Artisans Behind the Trail

When you sponsor an Echoes of the Forest installation, you're not simply commissioning a piece of art. You're actively underwriting one of the most meaningful recovery efforts in our region's history. Each installation along the memorial woodworking trail honors what was lost, educates future generations about a 1,000-year geological event, and provides immediate income to the artisans whose livelihoods were disrupted by the storm.

Chester Shuey of Appalachian Joinery — Echoes of the Forest artisan, fine furniture maker, and creator of the live-edge benches installed at the NC Arboretum and in Asheville's River Arts District
Chester Shuey — Appalachian Joinery
Mike Ayers of Whetstone Woodworks — internationally acclaimed chainsaw carver and Echoes of the Forest artisan, creator of the 'Soccer Cub' sculpture at Cane Creek Park
Mike Ayers — Whetstone Woodworks

Consider Chester Shuey of Appalachian Joinery, whose fine furniture inspires younger generations of woodworkers. Or Mike Ayers of Whetstone Woodworks, whose chainsaw carvings translate the raw beauty of these mountains into permanent public sculpture. They're storytellers, historians, and the backbone of a regional creative economy. Stewardship ensures their work continues — and that their stories continue to be told.

What Your Stewardship Provides

Direct Economic Impact

Every sponsored installation puts money directly into the hands of local woodworkers. With 78% of forest damage falling on private land, individual craftspeople carry an outsized share of the recovery. These commissions are crucial financial lifelines — and they don't trickle down. They flow directly to the artisan whose name is on the piece.

Permanent Recognition

As a steward, your name or organization is permanently linked with a specific installation. Decades from now, visitors will pause at a memorial bench or sculptural piece, read the dedication plaque, and understand that in Western North Carolina's hardest hour, you stepped forward.

Educational Legacy

Each installation includes educational components that tell the story of Hurricane Helene's impact, forest ecology, and the region's recovery. Stewardship helps ensure these lessons aren't forgotten — creating teaching moments that will resonate with school groups, tourists, and community members for generations.

The Ripple Effect of Your Support

Stewardship creates waves of positive impact throughout Western North Carolina:

A Future Rooted in Hope

A woman and a young person planting a young evergreen sapling in fresh gravel outside Foundation Woodworks' temporary tent gallery in Asheville's River Arts District — the colorful murals of the surrounding RAD buildings visible in the background, marking the literal replanting of a neighborhood that flooded under 24 feet of water during Hurricane Helene
Replanting at Foundation Woodworks — Asheville's River Arts District, after the flood.

Imagine the completed memorial trail years from now. At each turn, another installation tells part of the story — the depth of what was lost, and the strength of what was made in response. A name on an installation isn't just a record of a donation. It's a record of someone who chose to invest in artisans when they needed it most, and who helped Western North Carolina write one of the most quietly hopeful recovery stories in this region's history.

As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, contributions to Echoes of the Forest are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law. The benefits, though, extend well beyond tax advantages. This is about legacy. About community. About what becomes possible when people choose to participate in transformation rather than simply observe it.

The trees have fallen. The artisans are at work. The vision is clear. What's needed now is you.

Become a Steward of Transformation

Let's discuss how your stewardship vision aligns with our artisan commissions. Whether you have a specific installation in mind or want guidance in choosing one, we'd love to talk.

Email: info@echoesoftheforest.org
Phone: (828) 273-3096

Echoes of the Forest is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization transforming Hurricane Helene's fallen trees into a memorial woodworking trail across Western North Carolina — creating economic opportunities for local artisans, educational landmarks for visitors, and healing spaces for our community.

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