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No One Knew Why She Grew Sunflowers Against Her Cabin — Until the Blizzard Proved Her Right

In the summer of 1887, in the wide dry flats of Beaverhead County, Montana Territory, a woman named Cora Elstad did something that no one who saw it could explain. She planted sunflowers against her cabin, not in a garden plot set off from the structure, not in a row along a fence line where they might have served as a windbreak for a kitchen garden, but directly against the logs themselves, so close that the seeds were pressed into the dirt within inches of the foundation.

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She planted them on every side, north wall, south wall, the two short ends. Four unbroken rows of sunflower seeds pushed into the hard Montana earth in a tight band that followed the outline of her cabin like a border drawn in soil. Her nearest neighbor, a wheat farmer named Dale Prewitt, watched her do it from across the shared fence line one afternoon in late May.

He stood with his hands in his pockets and his hat pushed back and said nothing for a long time because there was nothing obvious to say. A woman planting flowers against a log cabin was not dangerous. It was not offensive. It was simply pointless, and pointlessness in that country, where every hour of summer labor had to justify itself against the coming winter, was its own kind of failure.

Prewitt had been farming the Beaverhead Valley for 11 years. He had watched dozens of families arrive, plant their claims, build their cabins, and either survive or leave. The ones who survived understood a simple principle that governed everything in that territory. You did not waste summer. Summer was short and winter was long, and every action taken between April and October was either preparation for the cold or it was vanity.

He could not determine which category sunflowers fell into, and so he asked. He walked to the fence and called across to her and asked, plainly and without malice, what the sunflowers were for. Cora looked up from the dirt. She was kneeling with her hands black to the wrists, pressing seeds into a shallow trench she had scraped along the base of the north wall.

She was 34 years old, slight across the shoulders, with a stillness about her that people in the valley had learned to associate not with shyness, but with a kind of settled certainty. She had arrived in Beaverhead County 3 years earlier, a widow with a 7-year-old daughter and a loaded wagon, and no apparent anxiety about the fact that she was building a life alone in a country that had already killed her husband.

She looked at Dale Pruitt across the fence and said they were for the cabin. Pruitt waited for more. Nothing more came. He nodded slowly, the way a man nods when he has decided not to press a question whose answer he suspects will not satisfy him, and walked back to his own work.

Within 2 weeks, the story had spread through the valley the way all stories spread in small communities where entertainment was scarce and neighbors were few. Cora Elstad was growing sunflowers against her cabin, not near it. Against it. The telling always emphasized that detail because it was the detail that transformed an odd preference into something genuinely baffling.

A woman who grew sunflowers in a garden was a woman who liked flowers. A woman who grew them pressed flat against the walls of her home, so close that the stalks would eventually lean against the logs and the broad leaves would lay flat against the chinking, was a woman doing something that needed explaining, and no explanation had been offered.

Dale Pruitt, who had asked directly and received no useful answer, became the primary narrator of the story by default. He told it at the Dillon Trading Post. He told it to his wife, Margaret, who told it at the church social. He told it to the men who gathered at the mill on Saturday mornings to wait for lumber orders. In every telling, Pruitt was careful to note that he bore no ill will toward Cora Elstad.

She was a capable woman. She kept a clean property. Her daughter was well-fed and well-mannered, but the sunflowers were a waste of effort, and in Beaverhead County, effort wasted in summer was warmth lost in winter. That was not opinion. That was arithmetic. The name came naturally, the way such names always do in tight communities.

Someone, Prewitt thought it might have been the Allinger boy, the one who delivered firewood, called it the flower cabin. The name stuck because it captured perfectly the absurdity that the community felt. A cabin was not a thing you decorated. A cabin was a tool for surviving winter, and you maintained it the way you maintained any tool, with function governing every decision.

You  the gaps with moss and clay. You bank the foundation with earth. You stacked firewood against the north wall to break the wind. These were rational actions taken by rational people against a threat that killed without prejudice. You did not plant flowers. Cora heard the name. She could not have avoided hearing it in a valley that small, where the trading post and the church and the mill formed the three points of a triangle that enclosed every conversation worth having.

She heard it, and she continued planting. By late June, the sunflower stalks were already a foot high, a dense green fringe running around the base of the cabin like a hem stitched too tight. What no one in the valley understood, because no one had thought to ask, and Cora had not thought to explain, was that the sunflowers were not decoration.

They were the outermost layer of a system that Cora had learned from her mother, a woman named Sigrid Elstad, born Sigrid Haugen, who had spent her childhood not in Montana or Minnesota, or any of the places where Scandinavian settlers typically gathered, but in Harvey County, Kansas, in the middle of the sunflower belt, living on a quarter section that bordered a Mennonite settlement.

The Mennonites had come to central Kansas from the steppes of southern Ukraine in the 1870s and they had brought with them, among other things, the sunflower. Not as an ornament. The Mennonites grew sunflowers the way other people grew timber, as a material. They pressed the seeds for oil. They fed the stalks to livestock.

And they stacked the dried remnants, the thick woody stems, the broad fibrous heads, the tangled mass of leaves and husk against the walls of their root cellars and their animal shelters and, in some cases, their homes. Sigrid Haugen, who was 10 years old when her family’s claim bordered the Mennonite land, watched this practice every autumn with the particular attention of a child who does not yet know which observations will prove useful and therefore stores all of them.

She watched the Mennonite women carry armloads of dried sunflower stalks to the walls of a root cellar and press them against the sod in a thick band, 3 and 4 ft deep, until the structure disappeared behind a mound of dead plant matter. She asked her mother why they did it. Her mother did not know. She asked a Mennonite girl her own age, a girl named Anna who spoke low German and broken English and who explained, with the plain confidence of a child repeating something she had been told a hundred times, that the stalks kept the

cold from finding the wall. Sigrid remembered that phrase. She carried it from Kansas to Montana when she married Niels Elstad in 1879 and she carried it through 12 winters in the Gallatin Valley before she died of fever in 1891 and somewhere in those 12 winters she taught it to her daughter Cora, not as a theory but as a practice, the way all durable knowledge is transferred, by doing it together autumn after autumn until the daughter’s hands knew the work before her mind could have explained the reason. The reason was not complicated,

but it required a shift in thinking that most people in Beaverhead County had never been asked to make. The conventional understanding of winter shelter was simple and universal. Build walls thick enough to hold heat inside, seal every gap to prevent cold air from entering, and burn enough fuel to keep the interior temperature above the threshold of survival.

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