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#1
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Mountain Cedar
How long does this stuff go on? So many people are bothered by it, some even wearing masks outside. And when it's done, is there some other allergen waiting in the wings? ----- On another note, I wish people would stop with the doggone spam posts. LINDA |
#2
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Mountain Cedar
Male cardinal in what appears to be a live oak, my guess of the attachment picture. Snow, so can't be local if recent picture.
From what I've seen, the juniper ashe (blueberry) tree pollenates in the mid-winter for about a month. Some people do develop some allergy tolerance for it. The rocky mountain version has red berries and does not reside in the TX hill country. "Mountain cedar" and "cedar" are common generic names for both trees. Consider living in a controlled environment if one cannot deal with nature's way of multiplying. -- Dave wrote in message ... How long does this stuff go on? So many people are bothered by it, some even wearing masks outside. And when it's done, is there some other allergen waiting in the wings? ----- On another note, I wish people would stop with the doggone spam posts. LINDA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
#3
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Mountain Cedar
"Sqwertz" wrote in message ... On Wed, 16 Jan 2008 08:15:03 -0600, Wooly wrote: Consolation prize: if you just moved here and this is your first encounter with Ashe juniper (which is what the shit really is) you may in future become less sensitive to it. Or it may get worse. I didn't react to it until I lived here 3-4 years. -sw should be gone totally by mid Feb, sometimes end of Jan. Water tends to deactivate it. |
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