The Old Folks Home

I always felt with a lot of them that there was just a real wide chasm separating us and try as I might I could never bridge that chasm. Maybe it's because I wear my hair super short or because I wear jeans and t-shirts for everyday wear, I dunno. I'm a firm believer that God is more concerned on what is in a man or woman's heart over what he or she is wearing when they clean out the chicken coop. The men are friendlier and have learned that they can talk business with me as well as my husband. Something that just doesn't happen in their world and it has been hard earned on my part. Which reminds me, I need to go down the road and dicker with the Small Motor Repair shop owner's son for hatching eggs. I'm absolutely bombing in my search for OEGB eggs.

I became "friends" with some of them. The two brothers that I worked directly for would chat with me about almost anything. One of the wives would say niceties to me, the other was mute with me. Most of the children were mute with me but some were friendly enough, especially when we'd work side by side like filling my truck with produce from a buggy. The grandmother was the kindest to me. She invited me into her home, answered my questions and took me out to the barn to see the babies without my asking. She also made me shoo fly pie when I told her how much I liked it.

There were cousins and other relatives and community that I worked for, as well. Some would leave me for hours in the hot sun and others would invite me into the barn or onto the porch. I really got a wide variety of responses from the community. It was also this time in my life that I was moody and dressed in all black with heavy black eyeliner. I'm pretty shocked that some of them responded to me. My dad worked for them as well, mostly when I couldn't commit to a day or time that they needed me, and they responded in almost the same way to him - some were friendly, some were not friendly but not rude.

My most laughable moment was when the phone rang at 0400. One of my parents answered, woke me up and told me that Elim was on the phone. I remember the back and forth... "who?" "Elim." "I don't know an Elim..."

I finally get awake enough to go to the phone and it was someone in the Amish community (obviously Elim) calling me to pick him up. I had never met him before, I guess my phone number was shared widely among the community... I yelled at him that it was 4 am and that normal people were asleep and that he'd have to find someone else to pick him up. I eventually met him later that summer and I as an adult I have now come to respect that 4 am is a normal awake time (I was up at midnight last night after sleeping 4 hours).

The second funniest time was when I was driving brother Roy home from something. We hit a giant bug which smeared all over the windshield. He looked at me and said "what's the last thing that goes through a bugs mind when it hits the windshield?" Perplexed, I said I didn't know. He deadpanned: "its butt!"

They're not so different than us.
 
Superchemicalgirl, I've met with pretty much the same reaction from the women. The older women especially are great. One lady in the community around us runs the local bakery. She is just an angel of a woman as it the mother of the young man who does contractor work for us. We sit and talk about gardenting and herbology. The younger women pretty much act like you have cooties or what I hate most of all is when you are around a group of two or three of them and they insist on talking Pennsylvania Duetch.
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My father was Pennsylvania Duetch and both spoke it and German. I grew up learning a splattering of the language but not enough to hold a conversation. Still I can pick words out of a conversation. When I told one young lady my parentage, she looked at me with huge eyes and said "well you can understand what we are saying can't you?" Tired of the rudeness I just smiled sweetly and said yes, some of it. She was a lot more careful about talking "English" around me from that point on. One time one of them referred to us as "You English" and my husband said NO! we are not English. I am Scottish and Irish, and my wife is Pennsylvania Duetch, Cherokee Indian and Irish" That was another phrase they stopped using around us.

As for Shoo Fly Pie, grew up on that delicacy! Gotta try to find my recipe.

Thanks for the OEGB lead, Ronott!. I'll study it after supper.
 
Sounds good, contains molasses where pecan pie is corn syrup. There's also chess pie transparent pie and crack pie!
Now I'm getting hungry...
 
Picture pecan pie and instead of pecans there is about an inch or two of Strusell topping. The topping and the strussell meld into one except for the last half inch or so on top of the crust and it stays nice and gooey. I loved to eat it like a coffee cake.

God I miss my mom's Shoo Fly! I really have to find that recipe!

I'm almost ready to celebrate! Just heard back from a potential supplier about 45 minutes away for hatching eggs. Black OEGB and Japanese Bantams. Silkies, too!
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penny1960, that sure sounds close to my mom's recipe. She got it from my paternal grandmother. I can still hear NaNa on the phone. German accent so thick you could cut it with a knife. Tomorrow I'll get up to the attic and look for that recipe.
 
Lost mine close to 20 years ago but do recall from childhood and the looks on my Dads face as she pulled
shoo fly pie from the oven
 

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