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If you’ve lived in the area for any stretch, you’ve probably dealt with or known someone who hates this time of year and the dreaded “cedar fever ... caused by a juniper tree?
Cedar fever is common in areas with a lot of mountain cedar or juniper trees, which release a large amount of pollen that can cause strong allergic reactions. Cedar trees release a lot of pollen ...
What we call “cedar trees” are a type of juniper tree -- specifically Ashe juniper -- named after William Willard Ashe (1872-1932), who was a pioneer forester for the United States Forest Service.
Welcome to cedar fever season, the time of the year when pollen from mountain cedar, or Ashe juniper, trees invades our sinuses and trigger allergic reactions. The Texas Parks and Wildlife ...
What we call “cedar trees” are a type of juniper tree -- specifically Ashe juniper -- named after William Willard Ashe (1872-1932), who was a pioneer forester for the US Forest Service.
juniper trees are one of the few plants that pollinate during the winter. University experts said cedar fever symptoms are often confused with a cold or the seasonal flu. These symptoms can ...
Ellen Troxclair, R-Austin, filed HB 2239 on February 13, 2023, intending to limit municipal interference in the private removal of ashe juniper ... on cedar fever, the pollen the tree gives ...
It stops cities and counties from prohibiting property owners from removing ashe juniper trees, which produce the cedar pollen that makes so many Central Texans sniffle and sneeze. The bill's ...