1/13/2003: Amish barn move

Undertoad • Jan 13, 2003 12:07 pm
Image

Tip o' the hat to Slithy Tove.

Dateline rural Iowa. A couple buys a load of farmland to put up a new cookie-cutter housing development. They buy the buildings on the land too, but they don't need the 160-foot-long turkey farm so they auction it off.

At 9:30 ayem the Amish folk arrived, divided the building up into four parts, then "on three - 1, 2, 3", they picked up part number one and marched down the highway.

And they steered it, too - "on west, brother" and all 150 of them turned right.

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Hup, hup, hup. With only human power, they get the job done. How did they know it would work, or how many man to bring to the task? Who knows?

But four hours later, the barn was moved, one mile west.

full story
Cochese • Jan 13, 2003 12:45 pm
What would make this story funnier is if they had won it via Ebay.
goethean • Jan 13, 2003 3:01 pm
How did they know it would work, or how many man to bring to the task?


They're allowed to use arithmetic, right?
tjennings • Jan 13, 2003 4:51 pm
Looks like some sort of Flintstone's mass transit system.
xoxoxoBruce • Jan 13, 2003 5:46 pm
[SIZE=3]They bring everyone for everything.[/SIZE]
warch • Jan 13, 2003 6:27 pm
This is a great Monday image. I hate to throw stuff away too. thanks!
chrisinhouston • Jan 14, 2003 10:46 am
How about Stonehenge? As I recall from my last visit to show my wife and son, the big upright blocks came from Wales and were moved 150 miles by pre Bronze age people.
Cochese • Jan 14, 2003 6:03 pm
Originally posted by chrisinhouston
How about Stonehenge?


I don't think they got a pic of them doing it though.
quzah • Jan 15, 2003 1:38 am
Ok, I'll set it up, you guys finish...

"How many Amish does it take to move a barn?"

:D

Quzah.
richlevy • Jan 28, 2003 8:50 pm
I thought the Amish did not appreciate having their pictures taken.
Elspode • Jan 28, 2003 11:15 pm
The trick is to take it while they're busy and have their hands full, then run.
Uryoces • Jan 29, 2003 3:55 pm
The Amish have some modern conveniences, they're just very choosy about what they introduce. You'll find some Amish tooling around on rollerblades. It's good exercise. They do have a few cell phones, but it's mostly for business and emergencies, and strictly controlled of course.

the picture looks like an Amish version of a motor home.
lhand • Jan 29, 2003 4:53 pm
I'm really having trouble forming that image in my head. Wow. That's a picture I'd really like to see.
Elspode • Jan 29, 2003 5:00 pm
A few years ago I saw two Amish women rollerblading in the parking lot of a small auto repair shop in rural Missouri. We came around the bend on a backwater county highway, and there they were. I almost drove off the road.

I have always wished I had a camera ready that day.
russotto • Jan 30, 2003 4:13 pm
A company called Zephyr Tours does in-line skate tours of various places. One of the less-interesting places is Lancaster County -- and they use rollerblading Amish guides.

I believe the Amish objection to being photographed only extends to their face. In any case, the Zephyr brochures have plenty of pictures of the backs of the Amish guides.
Uryoces • Jan 30, 2003 5:56 pm
I think the no-photo clause may be an extension of 'Thou shalt make no graven image'. I personally have no problem hamming it up for the camera.
juju • Jan 31, 2003 11:23 am
..
lhand • Jan 31, 2003 1:01 pm
Juju, you've made my day!
juju • Jan 31, 2003 1:03 pm
Here at the Cellar, we aim to please. B^)

Hey, I kinda feel like I'm in that Volkswagon commerical.
wolf • Feb 1, 2003 1:02 am
Surely rollerblades are hochmut, and therefore against the Ordnung ...

Although I guess if they are black and don't have buttons, they might be okay.

It would be one heck of a thing to get shunned for, though.
blowmeetheclown • Feb 1, 2003 3:41 pm
Sa-weet! Amish lesbians. I guess they don't get to use any battery-op toys, though.