ELK PARK, N.C. — It's still difficult for Mike Ellenburg to see the damage Helene left in Elk Park, North Carolina.
"Never in my lifetime, no I have not," Ellenburg, Fire Chief at the Elk Park Volunteer Fire Department, said. "We had to bring in heavy equipment and open the road up."
The storm left homes destroyed, trees toppled and cars flipped. It's left roads near rivers and creeks nearby unrecognizable.
"Used to be a paved road, houses on both sides," he said. "They're gone."
"You'll see some vehicles down here that are sideways, and they'll have spray paint on 'em," Ellenburg continued. "Marking that that vehicle has been checked and that nobody was inside of it or around it."
Ellenburg says he believes there are four areas around Elk Park in a similar state, damaged and difficult to get into. Despite that, help is still coming, both from the town and the rest of the state.
"We're just trying to get it organized," Connie Guinn, a volunteer said, standing in front of pallets of food and water. "Because we can't find nothing, and neither can anybody else."
Donations have continued to arrive at the Elk Park Volunteer Fire Department. Ellenburg says some have even come from around the country.
Other agencies, like the Dallas, North Carolina volunteer fire department, have also arrived to help where they can.
"It's amazing how well and good the people are helping out," Guinn said.
Ellenburg says it will take time to rebuild their community, but it's made easier to get through with neighbors like theirs.
"I would only say that I don't want to live anywhere else but here in Avery County, North Carolina," he said.