DALLAS — Oh, the dreaded mountain cedar pollen. If you’ve been sneezing, itching, or dealing with a stuffy nose lately, you're not alone and chances are it is the pollen. Many refer to the symptoms as ...
Colds and the flu aren't the only reason many have been sniffling and sneezing over the past few months. "Cedar fever," as it's often called, is a wintertime allergy offender caused by the Eastern Red ...
It was not your imagination. Cedar fever has kicked in and during the weekend it was very bad. AccuWeather put tree pollen, which includes the mountain ashe juniper that causes the misnamed cedar ...
It’s back... mountain cedar has returned to the pollen count for the first time this season, thanks to breezy north winds. From now through Valentine’s Day, thousands of us who are allergic to cedar ...
SHREVEPORT, La. (KSLA) - Spring has arrived, causing many to come down with minor illnesses. But this isn’t only because of the temperature change. Most know this time of year as allergy season.
This weekend's sleet and freezing temperatures have been great for people who have cedar fever allergies. The sleet and ice helped tamp down ashe mountain juniper pollen, which brought the amount in ...
Mountain cedar season begins in December, peaks in January, and ends around Valentine's Day (Copyright 2021 by KSAT - All rights reserved.) After a relatively tame ...
So far this year — setting aside the January freezes — our weather has been dominated by breezy, dry cold fronts, each one stirring up cedar, aka Ashe juniper, pollen as it sweeps through. We are in ...
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