Home | Electronic Edition | Subscriptions | Archives | Calendar | Sitemap | Customer Service | Help Register | Login   
FrederickNewsPost.com
Frederick, Maryland

30ºF P/SUNNY | View 5 day forecast | Traffic Report
NewsOpinionSportsBusinessArt/LifeLocalClassifiedsSpecial SectionsBlogsAround FredCoMarketplaceNewspaper In Education
   Tue, February 9, 2010     WEB ONLY: RSS | Email Alerts | Multimedia | Columns | Blogs | Forums | Wireless
Local News
Home > Local News
Bookmark EMAIL PRINT

Advertisement


Frederick reminds 'Peruvian redneck' of his homeland
Originally published November 20, 2009


By Pam Rigaux
News-Post Staff

Frederick reminds 'Peruvian redneck' of his homeland
Photo by Travis Pratt


For Luis Perry, moving to a farm in Frederick County was like returning to his Peruvian roots.
Luis Perry has traveled both his native Peru and the U.S., first making bracelets, then working as a laborer, a pipefitter and now a painter. Landing on a farm in Frederick County was like returning to his roots.

Perry calls himself a "Peruvian redneck," because his grandfather, who was Irish, had red hair and a red face, and often a red neck, Perry said.

Now 50, he moved to the United States when he was 25.

He lived in Chicago but didn't like the cold weather. He got stuck in Silver Spring on a bad deal. "I was supposed to go with a friend to Miami. He lied to me."

Silver Spring is where Perry met his wife, another Peruvian. A year ago they broke up and Perry came to Frederick on the advice of a friend.

His two children love the farm on Elmer Derr Road where he rents a room, he said. They help him feed the goats and rabbits.

The farm reminds Perry of Peru. The owner is an excellent cook like his father and grandfather, he said.

"My grandfather opened a bakery in the mountains," Perry said, in the town of Huancayo.

His father opened a seafood restaurant in another small Peruvian town where Perry grew up.

It was a beautiful town, but his youth had some rough edges, Perry said.

His parents divorced when he was 9. His father remarried a year later.

"That was a shock for me," Perry said. "My father told me, 'You can call her mother.' It wasn't so simple. It took a long time to digest."

Academics were not easy either, he said. A head injury when he was a young left him with impaired memory.

"I had a hard time memorizing things, and I had headaches."

He dropped out of high school when he was 16 and struck out on his own.

He met a "hippie Americano" in Lima who taught him how to make bracelets. He then became a laborer at an oil refinery on the Pacific Coast outside Talara.

"I helped put the pipes together with a wrench," he said.

He did that for four years then moved to a position on an oil platform about three hours offshore.

He was amazed by the aquatic life.

"You see a thousand dolphins jumping on the water," he said. "It is a dream."



Post your comments »

Top Headlines
Round 2: Snow expected to fall today, Wednesday

Fast on the heels of the largest 24-hour snowfall to hit the Frederick County since 1983, meteorologists are predicting another round of heavy snow and wind to hit today.

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning Monday afternoon for the area, including Frederick County, and said 10 to 20 inches of snow is possible by Wednesday night.

Weather-related closings, delays
A list follows of weather-related closings and cancellations for this week.

Fire and police blotter
Police search for robber

School closures cause makeup schedule revision
Even though Frederick County Public Schools are closed today -- using the sixth snow day this school year -- the school system will not hold school on the Monday Presidents Day holiday as the first scheduled snow makeup day.

Crowds pay respect to fallen marine

Even U.S. Marines couldn't hold back tears Monday at the viewing of their colleague, Sgt. David Smith.

The procession to the Frederick Christian Fellowship Church was led by Frederick County Sheriff's deputies. Dressed in full military regalia, Marines carried Smith's casket into the church followed by family members as more Marines stood at attention.

Story Tools
HOT TOPICS View all »

Frederick Businesses

Top Jobs View all »


Advertisements










Home | Sitemap | Customer Service | Electronic Edition | Subscribe


Please send comments to webmaster or contact us at 301-662-1177.
351 Ballenger Center Drive • Frederick, MD 21703

Copyright 1997-10 Randall Family, LLC. All rights reserved. Do not duplicate or redistribute in any form.
The Frederick News-Post Privacy Policy. Use of this site indicates your agreement to our Terms of Service.