NEWS CLIP FROM WASHINGTON POST

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96-00789R002000780002-3
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 4, 1998
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 24, 1986
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP96-00789R002000780002-3.pdf576.94 KB
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Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789R002000780002-3 With Helping Hands;. Va. widow Keeps Her Farm By Ed Bruske Washington Pact Staff Writer WOODSTOCK, Va.-Local farmers had seen the arrival of starry-eyed urbanites before- bringing their Volvos, their fancy. Jeeps and their brash plans to work the land for fun and profit. As sure as the Shenandoah Riv- er twists through the rock- studded valley, the dreams of city farmers seemed always to wither, leaving great expectations and another failed farm behind. Bob and Pat Wichser hoped to be an exception to that rule. Both high-level congressional aides, the Wichsers quit their jobs on Capitol, Hill in the spring of 1985 to raise sheep in the Shen- andoah foothills 85 miles south- west of Washington. At first, their plan struck locals as sheer nonsense. And when Bob Wichser, 42, was swept to his death by a? flood-swollen river just six months after he and his wife moved here, it seemed to confirm the community's worst fears about well-intentioned transplants who try to carve a living from this unforgiving landscape. Tragedy has not turned Pat Wichser away. She is still on the land, stubbornly trying to reas- semble the pieces of the couple's shattered dream. And she is not alone. Originally skeptical, local farmers have adopted the Wich- sers' vision as their own. n o J ena a a ey s eep r m. a See WICHSER, AS, Col. 1 Right, on bridge to the farm a plaque memorializes her husband Bob who died trying to save A- in 1095, flood Pat Wichser has won neighbors' support with her determination to carr on with Sh d h Vllh f Approved For Release 2000/08/08: CIA-RDP96-00789R002000780002-3 Approved, For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789R002000780002-3 A8 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1986 .Couple -Brought Naivete, Perseverance to Va. Farm WICHSER, From Al The Wichsers were unfazed by such minor setbacks, though. And Fired by the sheer will the Wich- when- they learned that a larger sers brought to their improbable farm was for sale at one of the enterprise, and by 40-year-old Pat bends in the river, they jumped into Wtchser's determination to remain, their pickup to take a tour. old hands have formed a bond with The Wichsers needed only one the newcomer and have helped her look at the 297-acre farm, then breathe life into her crippled sheep overgrown and falling apart, to farm. know they wanted it. They cashed- "People enjoyed watching them, Pat Wichser's retirement fund to the enthusiasm they had for the make the first payment, and, over a -work," said Doug French, a dairy glass of `wine one night in May farmer and a U.S. Farmers Home 1980, toasted a secret pact to quit Administration area official. "They their jobs and move permanently to were showing everybody how to qo the farm in five years. it." Nearly every weekend, the Wich- The Shenandoah Valley's panora- sers wpr.ked feverishly to clear mas of thick mountain forests and weeds and trash., They strung `rolling farm lands captivated the fences, began building a Wichsers years ago when they: 6,000 square-foot barn and re- gazed out their car window from stored an old wash house into a tidy Skyline Drive. Their weekend es- home, sometimes trudging a quar- capes to the hills took firmer root ter mile through waist-deep snow avhen, in 1975, they bought their when drifts blocked their truck. first 40-acre plot along the river Bob Wichset insisted on doing just outside Woodstock-the first the most difficult work'himself. installment on their dream of leav- "Remember when President Rea- ing'the city for good. gan's inauguration was called off Whenever they could break away because it was too cold?" said Rob- from the business of Congress, the ert Pangle, a real estate broker Wichsers.took up hammer and saw whose 'house overlooks the Wich- to build a small cabin on their iso- sers' from across the river. "Bob lated property. It, was not long be- was out there stringing fence." fore they dell into the company of Bob' Wichser believed in surviv- landowners such as French, who ing off his land. Never having lent an occasional hand. ' hunted before, he shot woodclfudks, On the Hill, where each was a top muskrats and other rodents for the ,aide to a Republican House mem- dinner table. bet, the Wichsers were almost in- "Whatever he got, we ate," Pat :separable. And despite conserva- Wichser said. -tive, midwestern upbringings-he Farm friends found some of these 'the son of a cereal company exec- exploits quaint, but they shuddered utive and she the product of a Pres- with apprehension at the couple's .byt