Holy cats, 220? That's insane. I know when the air quality is bad by how I react to it. I just check it on my phone or online to confirm. Wood smoke tops the list of anything else I'm allergic to, no contest. Perhaps 15 years ago, when the summers seemed to get hotter and dryer, we invested in a swamp cooler. That thing saves my life and otherwise I throw everything at the allergic reaction that I have available to me.huckelberry wrote: ↑Sat Aug 14, 2021 7:51 pmJersey Girl , Thankyou for your observations. You got my curiosity going about air quality index and I found a website showing current local measurements. Interest information to follow. It was about 60 a few days ago but smoke started increasing. Number went over 220 last night and this morning. It is 174 now with the weather person forecasting improvement tomorrow and the next few days. After that it could go up again. I was advised it was just last summer when it got much worse than this. I am obviously trying to distance myself from that memory of reddish yellow air.huckelberry wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 12:06 am
There are a couple of forest fires some 20 miles east of where I live. The wind is from the west so many days have seen little smoke. A few days visibility dropped to a mile or so. That may have included some smoke from Oregon. A couple of years ago smoke from large British Columbia fires settled in my area to the point visibility dropped to below 100 yards at times. We set up a box fan inside the house with air filter attached. That helped some. I have extra air filters and a couple of fans in case the smoke gets bad again. Still I am hoping smoke will never do that again.
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My the site has world map. I can see where the smoke is and is not. This appears likely to be smoke from California fires. I notice nothing but green spots and low numbers for Colorado. Must be some help from water you mentioned. The last substantial water we got was white and had to be shoveled off of streets and sidewalks. (early March)
I live in a forest. Each summer in June, the trees dump tons of pollen into the air. You can see it when the wind blows, billowing out of the trees. Am I allergic to that? Nope! But the wood smoke, the haze from the fires? That stuff wants to kill me.
Our AQI is at 49--Good--today. Go figure. It won't last long. I am so sorry for the people in states where the fires are burning. We've been through a wildfire ourselves and I know what it's like. I know that my griping about having to put things off like outside work is nothing compared to what they are dealing with but I tell you, after this past year and a half of having to stop/start, I am really tired of having to change plans.
One thing you can do...and this isn't a cure. If you don't live in a place with a dry climate that would lend itself to a swamp cooler, and IF you have a basement. Button up the house overnight, when you wake up in the morning, put your heating system on "fan" only, and it will circulate cooler air up from your basement...cools the house down a bit without bringing in the unwanted particulates from the outside air.
If you don't have a basement, just do it anyway. At least you'll have a feeling that there is air circulating in your home.
