Allergy seasons come in all shapes and sizes across Oklahoma. And even when the winter cold settles in, many Oklahomans still find themselves sniffling and sneezing due to a common winter culprit: ...
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 ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Winds and dry weather make cedar fever worse as the pollen from the ashe juniper trees blows around. (RALPH ...
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 ...
Have you noticed you suddenly have itchy eyes, a runny nose, a scratchy throat or just an overall feeling of being unwell? You might be a victim of cedar fever, a common Central Texas allergy. While ...
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 ...
See Austin's allergy calendar: cedar fever, oak, ragweed and mold timing, plus tips to prepare and ease symptoms before peak days.
Texas winters herald the bane of many allergy sufferers: cedar fever. From December to February, acres of mountain cedar—also known as Ashe juniper—in the Hill Country and parts of Dallas-Fort Worth ...
One benefit of a major winter storm in Texas: Allergy relief. North Texans who have been battling “cedar fever” from juniper pollen since early January will be happy to know that pollen counts have ...
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 ...