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Radial heat distribution, shift-based cooperation, and six centuries of Provençal communal oven wisdom — in 1893, a French baker did something that made every homesteader in Montana Territory ride over just to confirm three families had truly lost their minds. He wasn't building one cabin — he was building three, arranged in a triangle, with a single massive underground oven at the center connected to all three floors by buried channels. "Three families sharing one fire pit. They'll freeze arguing over whose turn it is to feed it." Then January dropped to forty-two below zero. And three families slept through the night while neighbours rose every two hours to feed stoves that could never win. This documentary-style episode explores how three 19th-century immigrant families used principles passed down from village bakers in Provence to create a compound where one fire heated three homes — where shift-based responsibility meant the fire never died, where shared labor replaced exhausted isolation, and where the space between their cabins became the warmest ground in Fergus County. You'll learn: Why a central underground oven with equal-length radial channels distributes heat equally to multiple structures — the same fluid dynamics that splits electrical current through parallel resistors How a continuously burning tandoor-style oven produces twenty thousand to thirty-five thousand BTUs per hour, delivering seven thousand to twelve thousand BTUs to each cabin floor Why the shift system eliminates restart losses — the enormous energy penalty required to reheat cold masonry that individual stoves pay every time the fire dies How three families burned one hundred ten pounds of wood per day combined while a single neighbour burned one hundred sixty pounds alone and maintained lower temperatures What Turkish tandir ovens, Chinese kang systems, and French communal baking all understood about shared fire that American homesteaders completely forgot — that one fire serves many when many serve the fire No myths. No miracles. Just physics, trust, and a fire that never died because three families refused to let each other freeze. #OffGridLiving #FrontierEngineering #CommunalHeating #SurvivalHistory #Homesteading EDUCATIONAL NOTE: This video features historically inspired storytelling created for educational purposes. All characters, names, and specific events are fictional, though the construction techniques, scientific principles, and survival methods depicted are grounded in real historical practices and established physical knowledge. Viewers interested in modern application should consult current building codes, safety standards, and applicable regulations. This content is intended for education and entertainment and should not be taken as professional, technical, or legal guidance.