Home feed and
grocery owner has colorful history
By Sharon Hicks, KP News
In the heart of Home, situated on a hill off Key
Peninsula Highway, is a small rural business called
Home Feed and Grocery. This little grocery and feed
store has been owned and run by a friendly,
ambitious and hard-working Key Pen resident, Trixie
Schick, for 35 years. It serves mostly locals, but
summertime brings a lot of tourists.

Trixie Schick in front of
her store in Home.
Photo by Karina Whitmarsh |
Schick was born and grew up in Graz, Austria, the
same city where Arnold Schwarzenegger was born. In
1949, she left Austria to make her own living. She
worked a variety of jobs all around the
Mediterranean in different countries and says one of
her most unusual ones was “on the job training” as a
magician’s assistant. “I eventually started training
other women as assistants and did a lot of costume
sewing,” she said.
While traveling and working, Schick met her husband
in Trieste, Italy, and they were married in Saigon,
Vietnam. He was in the military and was transferred
to Ft. Lewis in 1958, where he retired two years
later. Schick managed two grocery mini-marts and
quit after being held up at each one. In 1971, she
took on a franchise at Mode ‘O Day (a small but
popular women’s dress shop) at the Tacoma Mall. In
conjunction with that, two years later, she started
making bulk mail deliveries (so-called speed runs)
for the USPS from Bremerton to Belfair, Vaughn to
Purdy, and the whole Key Peninsula.
She liked the greenery of the Key Pen so when she
saw the grocery and feed store for lease (then
located across from the Home Marina), Schick decided
to open a business. In 1974 she purchased the lease,
packed her belongings and moved here. Business was
off to a surviving start with tourists adding to her
income, then in 1983 her lease expired and she moved
to her current location. For eight years, until
1981, she kept busy maintaining three jobs until she
let go of the first two.
Asked what she likes the most about being on the Key
Peninsula, she said: “the greenery, as it reminds me
of ‘home,’ and you get to know everybody.”
Schick has been robbed at gunpoint twice at the
current location. During a recent power outage,
someone broke into the store, and two days later
another robbery attempt was made but this one was
interrupted by one of her sons.
She still has a photo of a 500-year-old building
where her mother once worked. Schick decided years
ago to never return to her home country. She has
seen pictures of changes but wants to remember
things as they were.
The original signs that were used for the early and
current stores still exist at Home Feed and Grocery,
serving as memories of the past. One can be seen as
you go up the antique ramp and the other perched on
top of the store’s roof. The eye catcher, however,
is the tall, yellow neon sign that seems to say,
“Come on in, I’m open.”
The store is open seven days a week, every day of
the year. When Schick is gone, one of her two sons
helps out. Asked if she has any dreams for the
immediate future, she said, “For now, no, but you
never know. Life and business go on ‘one day at a
time.’”