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Winter Came With No Firewood — He Burned Buffalo Chips and Stayed Warm All Season

There was little reason to bargain when both men already knew the answer. Orin glanced toward the small wood pile behind the cabin where Flint circled once before, sniffing the damp cottonwood logs. “That stack won’t last a week,” Orin said, a faint smile pulling at one corner of his mouth.

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Around here, a man learns pretty fast that pride doesn’t keep a stove burning. The wagon rolled away with its load still tied down. Kellen watched it disappear across the prairie until the sound of the wheels faded into the wind. Buying enough dry wood had never really been an option. Winter had simply waited for him to discover that fact on his own.

The following afternoon, Kellen took Flint beyond the last homestead and headed west across the open prairie, nearly 3 mi from the cabin, the land began to change. Thick grass gave way to broad patches of flattened earth, where enormous buffalo herds had once gathered before moving farther south. Their thunder had vanished years earlier.

Only weathered bones, scattered hoof prints, hardened into the ground, and hundreds of pale gray buffalo chips remained under the winter sky. Flint slowed his pace. His nose stayed close to the frozen earth, weaving from one dried patty to another. He ignored the darker pieces and paused beside those bleached almost white by months of sun and wind.

Watching the dog stirred a memory Kellen had not visited in years. Long before claiming land at Red Antelopee Flats, he had worked beside freight wagons running the Plat River Trail. One bitter evening, with no trees for miles, an old wagon driver named Moses Greer had climbed down from his seat, gathered a few dry buffalo chips, and built a cooking fire before anyone else had finished searching for wood.

Several young teamsters laughed until the coffee pot began to steam. Moses never argued with them. He simply nudged another weathered chip onto the coals and said, “Out here, a man doesn’t burn what he likes. He burns what the land leaves him.” At the time, Kellen had treated the lesson as another trail trick.

Useful for boiling coffee or heating a pot of beans before sunrise, a cabin through an entire prairie winter was something altogether different. Even so, that forgotten evening gave him a reason to kneel in the frozen grass. Instead of stepping over the weathered buffalo chips, as everyone else did, he picked one up, turned it over in his hands, and wondered whether the prairie had been leaving behind more than most people ever noticed.

Kellen carried a small stack of dry buffalo chips toward the settlement instead of heading straight home. Before reaching his cabin, he stopped at the edge of the flats where Ruth Bellamy, a widowed frontier traveler who had spent years crossing the planes with wagon trains, was splitting kindling outside her leanto.

She looked at the stack in his hands and nodded once. “So you remembered?” Kellen mentioned the lesson Moses Greer had given him years earlier. Ruth smiled faintly. She had known men like Moses, practical people who learned from the prairie because they had no other teacher. They burn for a reason, she said, picking up one of the weathered chips.

Buffalo lived on prairie grass. Even after it passed through the animal, those plant fibers never disappeared. Sun and wind finished the rest. Dry enough, those fibers will catch and hold a fire. She snapped the chip cleanly in half. The outside can fool you. The center was pale from edge to edge. If the middle stays damp, the fire wastes its strength driving water out before it makes heat. That’s when the smoke comes.

She handed the broken piece back. Out on the trail, smoke drifted away. Inside a cabin, it stays with you. Her expression turned serious as Marion came to mind. A coffee pot over an open fire isn’t the same as keeping a woman with weak lungs alive through January. Smoke will take her long before the cold does.

Kellen looked down at the broken chip in his hand. Moses had shown him that buffalo chips could burn. Ruth had just explained the harder part. Burning them was only the beginning. Keeping a cabin warm without filling it with smoke would require something far more disciplined than a campfire on the open prairie.

The first trial began before sunrise the next day. Kellen arranged several buffalo chips inside the cast iron stove, exactly as he had seen Moses do years before. Ruth’s warning stayed in his mind, yet he trusted the dry, brittle edges more than he should have. For a few seconds, the fire looked promising. Then everything changed.

Instead of burning cleanly, a thick ribbon of black smoke rolled upward before spilling back into the room. A sharp, bitter smell followed. Hidden moisture deep inside several chips was turning into steam, stealing heat before the fuel itself could burn. Flint stood at once, the dog back toward the door, ears lowered, unwilling to stay near the stove.

Across the cabin, Marion coughed into her blanket. The sound was quiet, but it cut deeper than any criticism could have. Kellen crossed the room in two long strides and pulled the door open. Freezing prairie air rushed inside, carrying the smoke away while stripping the little warmth they had managed to build.

He used the fire poker to drag a half-burned chip onto the hearth and broke it apart. The outside had become white and fragile. The center was still dark. Ruth had been right. The fire had spent its strength fighting hidden moisture instead of warming the cabin. No explanation was needed. The mistake lay in his hand, and Marion had already paid the first price for it.

The failed fire changed the work, but it did not end it. Every buffalo chip Kellen gathered afterward had to earn its place before reaching the stove. He snapped each one in half, listening carefully as the pieces broke apart. The driest chips cracked with a sharp, hollow sound, and felt surprisingly light in his hands. Others bent slightly before giving way.

Their centers stayed dark, heavier than they looked, carrying a damp, earthy smell that no winter wind had fully taken away. Soon he stopped judging them by appearance alone. The pale weathered pieces became sunray. Those went into one pile. Anything with a brown core went into another and never reached the cabin fire.

Marian watched the growing stacks without offering advice. Instead, she found scraps of canvas and quietly stitched them into storage sacks. One held fuel ready for the stove. The other waited for chips that still needed more time. Outside, Kellen built a simple drying rack beneath the roof overhang, raising it 22 in above the frozen ground.

Air could pass freely underneath while drifting snow stayed below the fuel. The prairie wind had caused part of the problem, yet he began using that same wind to finish the drying instead of fighting it. Flint seemed to make his own choice. He curled beside the sacks filled with sunray chips and ignored the others. Little by little, buffalo chips stopped looking like scattered waste left behind on the prairie.

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