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Neighbors Laughed When She Built a Shed Around Her House — Until Her Firewood Stayed Dry All Winter

Wet wood doesn’t burn. Every homesteader knew this, but only one thought to do something about it. Minnesota Territory, summer of 1,886. Ingrid Larson stood in front of her cabin with a piece of charcoal and a scrap of paper, sketching lines that made no sense to anyone who happened to pass by. The cabin was small, 16 by 20 ft, built by her husband Eric before the fever took him last spring, and it sat alone in a clearing surrounded by birch and oak trees that would soon lose their leaves and spend 6 months buried under

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snow. The sketch showed the cabin with something added, a roof that extended 8 ft beyond the walls on three sides, supported by posts, creating a covered space that wrapped around the structure like a wooden embrace. It looked like she wanted to build a shed around her house, which was exactly what she intended to do.

You’re going to do what now? The question came from Henrik Olson, her nearest neighbor, who had ridden over to check on the widow and found her measuring timber with a length of rope. I’m going to extend the roof, Ingrid said, not looking up from her calculations. Create a covered porch on three sides, deep enough to stack firewood floor to ceiling and keep it dry all winter.

Henrik dismounted and walked around the cabin trying to understand what she was describing. You want to build a shed attached to your house just for firewood? For firewood, for tools, for anything that needs to stay dry, but mostly for firewood. Yes. Why not just build a separate woodshed? That’s what everyone does.

Everyone runs out of dry wood by February. Ingrid finally looked up at him, her blue eyes calm and certain. Everyone spends the worst part of winter trudging through snow to a woodshed that’s drafty and damp, hauling wet logs that smoke and sputter and give half the heat they should. I’m going to walk three steps from my door, grab wood that’s been drying for months under a solid roof, and burn it clean and hot while everyone else is rationing their soggy scraps.

Henrik stared at her for a long moment. Then he laughed, not cruelly, but with the genuine amusement of a man who thinks he’s hearing something absurd. Ingrid, nobody builds a roof around their house. It’s It’s not done. It would look ridiculous. It would look warm, she replied. When it’s 40 below and the snow is drifted to the windowsills, nobody cares what a house looks like.

They care whether the fire keeps burning. The other women are going to talk. The other women can talk all they want. They can talk while they’re shivering and I’m comfortable. Henrik shook his head, still smiling. Your husband would have My husband is dead. The words were flat, final, cutting off whatever folksy wisdom Henrik had been about to offer.

He froze to death in a blizzard because he went out to the woodshed for more logs and got lost between there and the house. 20 ft, Henrik. He died 20 ft from our door because he couldn’t see through the snow, and the woodshed was too far away. The smile disappeared from Henrik’s face. He hadn’t known the details of Eric’s death, only that the fever had taken him, which was the polite fiction Ingrid had allowed to spread because the truth was too painful and too personal to share. I’m sorry, he said quietly.

I didn’t know. No one knows, and I’d prefer to keep it that way. Ingrid returned to her measurements, but I’m not going to let it happen again, not to me, not to anyone who comes after me. If the wood is attached to the house, you never have to go outside to get it. You step onto a covered porch, you grab what you need, you step back inside.

3 seconds instead of 3 minutes, dry instead of wet, safe instead of dead. Henrik was quiet for a while watching her work. You really think you can build this yourself? I built half this cabin while Eric was sick. I can build a roof extension. It’s a lot of timber. A lot of work. I have all summer, and I have nothing else to do.

He nodded slowly, some of the skepticism fading from his expression. If you need help raising the posts, come find me. Some things are easier with two people. Thank you. I’ll remember that. He rode away, and Ingrid knew that by evening every homestead in the valley would be buzzing about the crazy widow who wanted to build a shed around her house.

Let them buzz. She had work to do. The first step was timber. Ingrid spent 2 weeks felling trees, choosing straight pines for the posts and oaks for the beams that would support the extended roof. She worked alone using techniques Eric had taught her, notching the trunk on the side you wanted the tree to fall, cutting from the opposite side until gravity did the rest.

Each tree that crashed to the forest floor was a small victory, proof that she could do what needed to be done without waiting for a man to do it for her. She stripped the bark with a drawknife, working the blade along the length of each log until the pale wood beneath was exposed. Green wood was too heavy and too prone to warping.

She needed to let the timber season for at least a month before using it, which meant she had to work quickly to have everything ready before autumn. The posts were the most important element. She cut 12 of them, each 10 ft long and 8 in diameter. These would support the extended roof, transferring its weight down to stone footings she would set into the ground.

She positioned them carefully in her plans, four on each of the three sides that would have the extension, spaced 6 ft apart to create bays that could hold stacked firewood. The beams came next, horizontal timbers that would run from the existing cabin walls to the outer posts, creating the skeleton of the roof extension.

She cut 18 of these, each 12 ft long, notching the ends so they would lock into place without needing complicated joinery. The rafters were smaller, 60 of them, each 8 ft long, running from the cabin’s existing roofline down to the outer edge of the extension at a gentle slope that would shed rain and snow.

She spent 3 days cutting these, her arms aching from the repetitive motion, her hands blistered despite the leather gloves she wore. By the end of July, she had all the timber she needed, stacked and drying in the clearing behind the cabin. The neighbors rode by occasionally, watching her progress with expressions that ranged from curious to concerned to openly disapproving.

She’s going to ruin that cabin, Martha Dahl predicted to anyone who would listen. All that extra roof, all that weight, the walls will buckle before Christmas. She should be looking for a new husband, agreed Solveig Haugen, who had been widowed herself 3 years ago and had remarried within 6 months. A woman alone can’t survive out here.

It’s not natural. Maybe she just needs time to grieve, suggested the more charitable voices. The poor thing lost her husband only 4 months ago. Ingrid heard the gossip through the usual channels, well-meaning visitors who thought she should know what people were saying, busybodies who wanted to see her reaction, friends who worried about her reputation.

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