Blog > Winter Set the Rules
Cold didn’t stop chores
The old timer grew up when subfreezing temperatures weren’t uncomfortable. They were dangerous.
He said, winter wasn’t something you complained about. It was something you planned for.
There was no electricity. No natural gas. No propane. Heat came from wood, and so did meal preparations. The same fire that warmed the house cooked the food. If the fire went out, everything stopped.
Wood was cut and stacked months ahead of time. Fires were tended through the night because letting one go out didn’t just make you cold. It set you back.
Water froze fast. Pumps locked up. Buckets iced over. Livestock still needed fed and watered no matter the temperature. Cattle didn’t wait for warmer days. Chickens still needed attention. Animals depended on you showing up, even when the cold cut through everything.
He said the worst part wasn’t the chores.
It was the outhouse.
No heat. No mercy. Just a long walk in the dark, hoping you’d remembered to bring a coat and wishing you’d gone before bed. He laughed and said, “You learned real quick how bad you actually needed to go.”
Travel slowed or stopped altogether. No plowed roads. No warm vehicles waiting. If you left the house, you committed to it. Getting stuck wasn’t inconvenient. It was a real problem.
Cold shaped habits.
It taught preparation instead of reaction. You learned to think ahead because winter didn’t forgive shortcuts. Rushing led to mistakes, and mistakes in cold weather were expensive.
He said the dangers still exist today, even if they look different.
Power goes out. Roads close. Equipment fails. Livestock still needs cared for. And when systems we depend on stop working, you’re reminded how thin the margin still is.
“Cold hasn’t changed,” he said. “We just added layers between us and it.”
They didn’t talk about the cold much back then. Not because it wasn’t bad, but because talking didn’t change it. You adapted. You planned. You respected it.
Today, cold is something we endure.
Back then, it was something you survived.
And that’s why old timers didn’t fight winter.
They prepared for it.
Dennis Prussman,
Premier Land & Auction Group
Real Broker, LLC,

