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North Carolina's Green River Race draws hundreds to help with Helene clean up

People crowd the steep banks of the Green River near Saluda, N.C., to watch participants in the Green Race, an event that organizers claim is the largest extreme kayak race in the world.
Rolando Arrieta
/
NPR
People crowd the steep banks of the Green River near Saluda, N.C., to watch participants in the Green Race, an event that organizers claim is the largest extreme kayak race in the world.
Today, the Green Narrows is different. Adriene Levknecht, who has won the Green Race for the past thirteen years, overlooks a gorge no longer familiar to her.
John Grace
Today, the Green Narrows is different. Adriene Levknecht, who has won the Green Race for the past thirteen years, overlooks a gorge no longer familiar to her.

Updated November 01, 2024 at 15:30 PM ET

The annual Green River Race in Saluda, North Carolina would have occurred this weekend. Helene decimated this Western North Carolina gem, now littered with debris. The hydrology and geology have changed, making the river unsafe to kayak. The fate of this whitewater destination is unknown. But according to race organizers, hundreds of would-be racers and supporters are expected to show up this weekend and help with the cleanup efforts. The story below from two years ago reflects an event once known as the largest extreme kayak race in the world.

SALUDA, N.C. — On the first Saturday in November whitewater kayakers from near and far gather in the town of Saluda, N.C. — about 30 miles south of Asheville — for one of the most intense sporting events in the nation, the Green Race. The race occurs in the Green Narrow Gorge in the Green River Game Lands.

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The only way to watch the race is to hike down a two-mile steep ravine — a trek so strenuous and technical that it parallels the vertical waterfalls the extreme kayakers are about to embark in. It's an event where it seems you couldn't have one without the other.

This year, about 175 expert boaters launched down a fast three-quarter-mile stretch of deadly Class V rapids.

Spectators — some 2,000 of them — make the descent deep into the narrow canyon and find a spot on the river banks to cheer the oncoming kayakers.

Every bit of rock is full as far as one can see downriver and upriver alike.

And being in the presence of thousands of friends and family, kids, parents, grandparents and pet dogs made for a surreal energy that is palpable – loud cheers resonating off the canyon walls.

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Adriene Levknecht won the women's heat of the Green Race and remembers being energized by the crowd's roar and thunderous applause as she navigated the hardest section of the race and made her final stretch to the finish line.

"It's like kayaking in a stadium. Everybody cheering, yelling. When somebody runs Gorilla, the biggest rapid out there, you can hear the echo from the people all the way down there," Levknecht says.

Levknecht learned to kayak on the Green. She has been coming here with her mom and dad for 17 years.

"When I was 18, I got to be a really good kayaker and this is where it was."

But this is the first time that her 72-year-old dad was not able to hike in to watch her race.

"He called me at the top where it gets really steep and he's like, 'A, I'm not going to make it. I can't. My balance. I just don't want to fall. I don't want to be the one who gets carried out.' And so I was like, 'Dad, just watch on Livestream. It's all good'."

Her 70-year-old mom, Laurie Levknecht, was able to make it in and stood on the river banks with thousands of others.

"I remember the first time I hiked in here, and I was like, 'Are you kidding me?' People kayak this. They got to be nuts."

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