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1880s Nebraska plains, late November. A woman and her two children arrive at an abandoned livestock barn after being forced off their homestead. The barn is huge, drafty, and impossible to heat — but structurally sound with a solid roof. Instead of trying to warm the whole barn, she stacks leftover straw bales from a nearby harvested field into a small tight room inside the barn, two bales thick on every wall, with bales laid flat across the top supported by barn rafters. She plasters the interior with mud and clay to seal drafts and prevent fire risk. The barn acts as a windbreak and rain shield around the straw room, and the straw bale walls provide R-30 to R-40 insulation — better than any log cabin on the frontier. She installs a tiny tin stove vented through the barn's existing roof vent. The double protection — barn shell plus straw bale insulation — creates a warm pocket that holds 60°F with almost no fuel while the blizzard rages outside at minus 35°F. Families from nearby homesteads whose frame cabins are failing in the storm end up sheltering inside her straw room in the barn. The combination of building inside an existing structure and using straw as insulation is what makes the system work — neither alone would have been enough.