“The one boy gets on the bus, and he goes ‘what are you doing?’ I said I’m making a hat. He said ‘that would be great going down ski slopes at Holiday Valley.’ So I said what color would you like? That started everything,” Reitz told the local NBC affiliate. From there, her hat-making picked up steam. Reitz usually crochets either elf hats with pompoms or potato sack-shaped hats with tassels at the corners, and she purchases all the yarn herself. “She cares. She cares about her students,” said third-grade teacher Deborah Bosworth. “Any student that I’ve had that has been on Miss Patty’s bus gets a hat, and they also get a friend. Miss Patty is one of the favorites.”
Despite the amount of work, she has already done, Reitz has no plans to stop anytime soon and is already organizing for next year's bus riders. Third-grade teacher Deborah Bosworth believes that Reitz's hats bring more than just warmth to the students; they bring friends as well. Reitz intends to keep crocheting until she is no longer able to, and her students will be sure to remember her fondly.
Miss Patty, as the kids call her, has made more than 7,000 hats for the students that ride her bus. https://t.co/UFduy5DoH7
— WHAS11 News (@WHAS11) January 21, 2023
“I’m going to do it until I can’t do it anymore,” she said. Miss Patty's act of kindness and generosity is inspiring. She is a great example to all of us that we can make a difference in the lives of others, even if it's something as simple as making hats. Miss Patty's selflessness is an inspiring example of how we can all make a difference in our communities.
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