Cedar can be nasty stuff. In my college days, I worked a summer job with a logging crew. We had harvested some cedar trees and at one point, a loose strand on a choker cable (apparently bearing some cedar sap) poked through my glove and stuck me at the base of my thumb. As the day progressed, my whole hand swelled up and became extremely painful. I had to take a couple of days off to recover.
Locally, pine pollen is a big deal in spring. Every surface becomes coated with yellow powder… including the pool water. I always end up a ring around it that looks like somebody took a yellow highlighter to it.
“They” claim that the pollen is too big to trigger allergies… I think they’re lying!
/youtube wizard of oz wicked witch of the west laughing
I feel like there’s a 1970’s song in “Cedar Fever Warning” in the vein of The Eagles.
Cedar can be nasty stuff. In my college days, I worked a summer job with a logging crew. We had harvested some cedar trees and at one point, a loose strand on a choker cable (apparently bearing some cedar sap) poked through my glove and stuck me at the base of my thumb. As the day progressed, my whole hand swelled up and became extremely painful. I had to take a couple of days off to recover.
Bad year for pollen here. Or so my sinuses tell me.
Sneezing and blowing nose a bunch.
/giphy sneeze.

Should ease off in March if not before.
Or anyway @therealjrn and I hope so
/youtube pollen Texas juniper cedar
Locally, pine pollen is a big deal in spring. Every surface becomes coated with yellow powder… including the pool water. I always end up a ring around it that looks like somebody took a yellow highlighter to it.
“They” claim that the pollen is too big to trigger allergies… I think they’re lying!