Last Easter, the sky carried much more than dropping candy; it carried a moment shaped by the 2000 Truck Series champion, Greg Biffle, who flew into storm-hit Black Mountain to bring together a fractured community. What began as just a rescue effort during a severe calamity turned into something far more everlasting. This year, the tradition returns, minus the man who first made it possible.
When the sky still carried hope: the Easter drop before everything changed
The effort didn’t start as a tradition; it was rather the need of the hour. In the weeks succeeding Hurricane Helene, which wreaked local communities, tearing up mountains, roads, and hospitals, remote places of western North Carolina like Chimney Rock and Yancey County were close to being erased. Relief seemed distant and impossible. That’s when Greg Biffle stepped into the mix, piloting an aircraft into the wilderness for the assistance of others.
“If I don’t go, who’s going to?… No communication, no power, roads are blocked, when you get up in the mountains, there’s no access anywhere,” said Biffle.
What he believed would be a single supply run turned into days of back-and-forth flights carrying food, essentials, and people across now barren, once-thriving lands, guided by his belief that, in his own words, “people are still in need, and I don’t want to leave a soldier behind.”

And then out of nowhere came the Biffle surprise.
An Easter egg release over a recovering town sounds like a spectacle when read on paper, yet on the ground, it hit completely differently. Children who had spent weeks being surrounded by damage and devastation suddenly looked up to something light, something normal. Eggs falling from the sky brought with them hope and celebration for a community that had only witnessed despair. The footage of this act spread widely on social media, drawing praise, yet failing to capture the shift in people who hadn’t smiled in weeks.
The moment was never designed to be repeated; it wasn’t an annual celebration but was rather a one-off escape. December changed that.
After the fall: how a final flight rewrote the meaning of the drop
The December crash near Statesville didn’t just claim the lives of a legendary NASCAR icon and his family; it took away from hundreds of thousands of people the glistening light of hope that had carried them through times of despair. The private jet, attempting to land in poor weather conditions, never completed its return, marking an abrupt end to a chapter that had only recently shifted from racing legacy to humanitarian impact.
The aftermath, even though causing extreme public agony, was felt more by those communities who had watched the sky with hope, knowing someone had their backs. This feeling still lingers over this year’s Easter celebrations.
However, the egg drop is now back, even more monumental than before. Yet its context seems to be completely stripped of its function. There are no impossible roads now, no urgency dictating the need for air access, and no crisis that requires immediate intervention, but the communities, in remembrance of their hero, dropped over 17,000 eggs from the sky to honour the one who isn’t with them anymore and celebrated the late driver’s contribution with local vendors, food, and music.
Black Mountain [N.C.] egg drop honors NASCAR legend Greg Biffle and his family – @WLOS_13 https://t.co/Twryhb9ERt
— Adam Stern (@A_S12) April 5, 2026
Heather Kamasa, organizer with A Hand from Above, explained, “We are honouring Greg Biffle with this drop this year because he was our original pilot, so today is an extra special day. Not only are we paying it forward for the community, but we’re also paying it forward for the Biffle family, who did so much for this community during Helene.”
And still the crowds gather in the same way. The eyes still lift in the same way to the skies.
The meaning has now evolved. What was just an act of relief is now something enduring, providing these still-devastated communities with a sense of togetherness to celebrate. The sky still opens, and the eggs still fall, but now with them they also carry forward a memory of a NASCAR champion.














































