If you want to see year-round color, you don't need to look further than your backyard. There are many native shrubs and bushes that look good in every season.
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 ...
SAN ANTONIO — With many experiencing allergy-like symptoms such as sneezing, watery eyes, and a runny nose, most in south Texas immediately point to Mountain Cedar - especially during the ...
Aerospace startup Boom says they've proven quiet supersonic flight is possible with their passenger airplanes after a ...
Pollen season continues to be in full swing with pine peaking, so it’s oak’s turn. According to the allergy tracker on the ...
The allergy season usually starts in February, but this year airborne cedar pollen was observed in Tokyo on January 8, the earliest date on record. An environment ministry survey found that ...
With warmer temperatures expected over the next few days, tree pollen peeking. At Cedar Hill State Park on Monday, people hit the trails to take advantage of a springlike February day. Aaliyah ...
It’s in this part of Texas — around San Antonio, Austin, and throughout the Hill Country — where we really feel the impacts of cedar pollen. In the Alamo City, we typically will see a surge ...
While it doesn’t look to be a lot of rain, there may be showers Thursday into Friday. Pine and cedar pollen is increasing and counts will remain very high all week.
Blame the trees. Cedar fever has returned. In Texas, Ashe juniper trees, also known as mountain cedars, are the culprit behind the allergy condition, according to the Texas A&M Forest Service.