Author and Speaker Cindy Wilson

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A Warm February Day

Posted on February 14, 2026February 15, 2026 by cwilson

This past week I was in De Smet for a morning Board Meeting, and had some open time before a later-afternoon meeting.

For lunch I went to the restaurant that for a long time was known as Ward’s. It recently transitioned to a new owner and is known as Covered Wagon Cafe and Bakery. Food is still good, btw.

I picked a booth and got situated.

After deciding what to have for lunch, I set the menu down on the table and looked up and out the front windows.

I had quite a view to sit and contemplate!

The Covered Wagon Cafe and Bakery is on the corner where Charles Ingalls built his first structure, which then became Couse Hardware.

Couse Hardware was diagonally across the main street from where Charles Ingalls built his second structure: the store building where the Ingalls family spent the harrowing months of the Hard Winter of 1880-81.

The placement of my booth meant that the angle of view through the front windows framed the spot where the back portion of Pa’s Store would have been.

In other words, where the Ingalls family huddled around a stove, in the room they chose to keep warm while much of the rest of the building went unheated in order to conserve fuel (twisted hay).

Pa’s building is long gone, of course.

It was in the spring of 1886 when it was moved to the back of its original lot and rotated to face north instead of west. In its place, the current brick structure was erected and served as the Bank of De Smet.

I was looking at the current structure of course, but there is something about De Smet that makes it easy, within the imagination, to “see” Pa’s small false-fronted frame store in its place.

As I waited for my food to arrive, my gaze remained on the spot where one family fought their way through that difficult winter, and thought of all I’ve learned about that time for the wider region.

There was also an interesting juxtaposition. It was 58 degrees outside on this mid-February day – possibly warmer than the air felt within the walls of the Ingalls store that long-ago winter.

The sky while I was in De Smet was bright blue and blindingly sunny, and not because it was reflecting off piles of sparkling snow. There was no snow. The area lakes were covered in a very soggy-looking ice, and with the forecast for similar temps over many more days, I’d not be surprised of some of those lakes opened up in at least spots.

While in southern Minnesota the chickadees have begun to whistle their spring call, the birds in De Smet were much more exuberant. The air was full of birdsong. My car was actually wonderfully warm when I got back inside after lunch. I love that feeling 🙂

So, this gloriously warm mid-February day in 2026 was in stark contrast to my musings on the Ingalls family huddled around their stove, feeding sticks of twisted hay to get a weak heat. Meanwhile I stood for awhile on the sidewalk, face rotated to the sun like a sunflower.

My mind thought of Pa’s sunflower song:
Oh, I am as happy as a big sunflower
That nods and bends in the breezes!
And my heart is as light as the wind that blows
The leaves from off the treeses!

He tended to sing it in times of trouble, which those cold mornings of the Hard Winter most certainly were. I, on the other hand, tend to sing it in my head when I feel one of those wonderfully warm sunbeams that hint at the approaching spring.

The yellow circle on the building that replaced Pa's Store Building shows the location, in spatial terms, where the Ingalls family would have kept a room warm enough to survive the Hard Winter.

Thank you for visiting! Both of these books were a labor of love. To say that sharing these stories and interacting with audiences has been an incredible joy is an understatement. This journey has transformed my life, and I am eternally grateful to the amazing people who have lifted me up to this new phase of life, which until fairly recently was focused on high-tech and communications. Research and storytelling is much more fun.

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Where Should I Order a Book?
If you order the physical book through Itasca, I as the author will receive a higher percentage (40-50% higher) of the sale price compared to online mega-retailers. Another request is to consider supporting one of the Ingalls-Wilder Home Sites by ordering from them (the Resources page lists the Home Sites.) Bookshop.org is another excellent option, and supports local book sellers. If you enjoy these books and would be willing to leave a review (a star-rating is sufficient!), please do so. Amazon and Goodreads reviews are an important component in a book’s visibility. Thank you for taking the time to submit a review.

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Join the private Facebook group for The Beautiful Snow. I share historical items and information related to my books, the Ingalls-Wilder families, and similar material. From October 2024 to May 2025, I also shared newspaper articles from the Hard Winter, on the date of publication, so that the group could walk through the winter day by day as the people lived through it. Those posts are still there and you just need to scroll to find them.

“Anybody can love the mountains, but it takes a soul to love the prairie.” — Willa Cather

"ALMOST all of the original tallgrass prairie has vanished. Lost to the plow, to development, and to—perhaps—a lack of imagination.”
― Cindy Crosby

“Elsewhere the sky is the roof of the world; but here the earth was the floor of the sky.” — Willa Cather

©2025 Cindy Wilson