A Young Homesteader Hid A Ginseng Fortune Under The Wyoming Wind-mdue - Chainityai

A Young Homesteader Hid A Ginseng Fortune Under The Wyoming Wind-mdue

The first thing they asked me was what I planned to grow.

I said vegetables.

It was easier than explaining my mother’s wooden seed box to men who already thought a nineteen-year-old girl had no business signing a land claim.

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The land office in Cheyenne smelled of ink, dust, and old wool coats, and the clerk kept looking past me as if my father might walk in late and correct the misunderstanding.

My father was not late.

He was buried under hard winter ground near Laramie, taken first by a logging accident and then by the cough that followed it.

The claim had been his.

When the clerk pushed the papers across the counter, he did it slowly, like he expected my hand to shake.

It did not.

I signed my name and rode south the next morning with a canvas tent, a spade, my father’s Winchester, and the oilcloth-wrapped box my mother had guarded through every move west.

The quarter section looked worse than it had on paper.

The wind moved over it like it owned the deed.

The creek bed held only a thin thread of water, and the sod house the last man had started was falling in on itself, one wall sagged as if it had given up before I arrived.

I slept the first night under canvas and listened to coyotes.

At sunrise I began digging into the side of a low hill.

I dragged scrap lumber from an abandoned line shack two miles away, one plank at a time, and braced the ceiling until it held.

Then I opened my mother’s box.

Inside were folded papers, neat packets, and notes written in her careful hand.

Dates.

Soil.

Shade.

Water.

Depth.

Temperature.

She had grown medicinal plants in Ohio before the west stripped her hands and stole her strength, and she had kept records like a surveyor mapping a country no one else could see.

The seeds I chose were small and pale brown.

American ginseng.

My father had told me once that the root was valuable because it took patience, and dangerous because other people preferred stealing patience to practicing it.

I remembered that while I turned two acres near the creek by hand.

In town, I bought flour, salt, coffee, and lamp oil.

When the storekeeper asked what I was putting in, I said root vegetables.

When the land inspector rode out in June to verify I was proving the claim, I said root vegetables again.

He glanced at the rows, saw nothing he understood, and rode off.

That was the first time I learned that being underestimated could be used like shade.

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