C2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 13,1980 Pattie works on intertwining grapevines which will become part of the wreaths she sells in her home business, the Berry Patch. She drags the vines from the woods and works on them in the clearing in front of her rural home. She brings the outdoors for Christmas Pattie makes wreaths made of grapevines and with a wide variety of natural materials to create honeysuckle and other natural materials. She works wreaths which are truly one of a kind. indoors A door hanging features some of the natural materials which characterize Pattie’s creations. BY SALLY BAIR Staff Correspondent Pattie Longenecker has a storage room which looks like an extension of the fields and woods which surround her Elizabethtown R 4 home There are feathers, vines, flowers, weeds and berries in colorful disasrray, but with a purpose - they will eventually find a place m one of her beautiful, original natural creations. Wreaths come to mind at this holiday season and Paltie’s work area abounds in wreaths of all sizes, but she also makes door hangings and other natural decorations which add a distinctive note to any kind of decor at any time of the year. Pattie insists that she has no more creative talent than most people, saying she just puts things together in a unique way that people seem to like She says, “I’ve always enjoyed creating with my own ideas. I never read craft books and I think that is some of the reason why my business has grown. I never took a course -1 just do my version of something. My wreaths are different; they are my feeling rather than a pattern. A lot of people want a little different effect. I don’t feel I have any talent. The basis for many of Pattie’s wreaths is honeysuckle and grapevines, which she intertwines to form a natural oval or round wreath of whatever size she desires. One of the largest she ever made was a three foot wreath which hangs over the fireplace in the tasting room at Nissley Vineyards. She formed that one in the woods and it was so heavy she had to roll it to her car. But she also makes tiny wreaths which are suitable for use as tree ornaments. She enhances the basic wreath by adding natural dried materials or a bird’s nest or some com husk flowers she has made. She began making the wreaths a few years ago when a friend told her to visit a department store which featured the grapevine wreaths as part of their window dressing. Pattie never found the tune to go, but began ex perimenting and soon leaned to make the wreaths herself. A former elementary school teacher, Pattie remarks, “I just assumed I’d get back into it, but I never even had > w . tune to substitute. I just try to keep ahead of my orders I had no intention of starting a business. “I love to be here, ” she asserts. “If I had a regular job I wouldn’t have the energy to run this place.” “This place” is the country home she shares with her husband John and their two children, Brad, 11 and Beth, sf] The Longeneckers moved back to Elizabethtown abos nine years ago after living in Michigan for seven years They searched in vam for an old stone farmhouse, finally bought the acreage where they now live, had it cleared, and built their own farmhouse. It is living on this 35 acres of land to which Pattie attributes some of her feelings and creations. The Longeneckers provide for a lot of their own needs, including raising chickens for eggs, ducks for eating, bees for honey and pollinating fruit trees and a large garden They have also planted an acre of domestic raspberries, which gives the children a lot of picking and also a sum mer income. Pattie says, “John and Brad do all the pruning This gives the children a lot of responsibility.” The Longenecker family heats their whole house with wood and the aid of a greenhouse on one comer. They are proud of the efforts they have made toward conservation and Pattie says, “We’re on our way to becoming self sufficient.” It was actually a gift from a neighbor which started Pattie on her business venture. A couple bought a goose for their Thanksgiving dinner but couldn't bear to kill it so they gave it to the Longeneckers where it became “Gertrude.” Gertrude is now a beloved pet, with al acquired mate, and it was her egg that Pattie fire? decorated for Easter. Pattie says, “I started messing around with duck eggs and then with corn husk flowers smce we had the corn for the animals I began giving them as gifts and it all mushroomed.” Another friend convinced her to attend the Mount Gretna Art Show and she sold out of her corn husk creations. Eventually Pattie named her busines the “Berry Patch,” and Gertrude became the symbol on the hand carved sign which marks the end of the Longenecker driveway. Pattie says, “We wouldn’t have put a sign up but everybody goes by the lane. ’ ’ Pattie does not keep hours at her home, because she spends a lot of tune in the woods gathering the materials she needs. All her sales are by order She usually works at the dining room table, often m an assembly line fashion.“ Then I can’t get away from it - this house is so open. I work other things around what I’m doing I’m very flexible -1 don’t put in a straight six hour day My family comes first and I try to fit my work around them,” she states. ' Pattie is always on the lookout for natural materials, and she has her family framed to do the same She laughingly recalls an incident where her husband wit nessed a car hit a great homed owl. He gathered up the carcass, took it home and provided Pattie with som« : beautiful and unusual feathers for her work. (Turn to Page C 3) !■ jl Pattie poses with her collection of natural decor ations which she had prepared for last week's AAUW Holly Trail in Lancaster. She is holding some of the corn husk flowers she makes wmesfead c H/cfys %