humidity last night brian put the coffeepot on the parlor-size woodstove and flipped the lid back on its hinges to sit open– not for coffee to put a little moisture in the air– we burn wood from pallets we break with a heavy castiron counterweight for a large window– we also burn scraps from dumpsters–things found on the street–leftovers from construction or demolition–the bequest of luck or looking–easy kindling– nothing so substantial as the rings wrapped in a tree– all through the time grandma and grampa had an indoor woodstove there sat a two-handled shallow aluminum pan regularly filled with water run into a quart mason jar and poured into a flat pan for increased surface area– moisture infused into the house to compensate for water lost when wet particles collide with the firebox and stovepipe and dry the air– the Dead Sea evaporates– salt makes crystalline formations where water once stood the most buoyant in the world– the house rests near the summit on a soft sidewinding ridge– a limestone foothill of what becomes the Ozarks– mountains sunken so old they lack the stature of more than hills– topography built on limestone foundations– the well runs deep 400 feet to pierce the water table– strata honeycombed by water and weight of land– as water from the flat pan evaporates calcium deposits, caught in solution and piped upward to the top of the ridge, in the hard water produce crystalline formations on the sides and bottom of the pan– the formations are thin and brittle like stalactites in dripping caverns– tonight, in Brooklyn, when i started a kindling blaze, braced by heavier scraps, i added water– in the coffeepot steam forms slowly to escape in unpredictable circles that rise like heat–
why i am a nomad: