Dr. Robert Bardon, a professor of forestry and environmental resources at N.C. State University, gives some scientific facts behind all that yellow dust. Questions and answers have been edited. Q. Why ...
Pine pollen has finally stopped falling in central North Carolina and you can sit on your patio in a pair of navy-blue shorts without looking like you fell into a glazed lemon pound cake. Except, when ...
A little pollen in February isn’t uncommon, but what we saw on Tuesday is unprecedented. The yellow coating is back on cars, sidewalks and really all surfaces in the Triangle. The yellow pollen is the ...
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — We are one week into March. While we’ve had storms and wild temperature swings so far this month, we still haven’t had the annual blanket of yellow pine pollen. In central North ...
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Yellow coated cars, yellow driveways and yellow lawn chairs. That yellow pollen is a nuisance, but when will it be gone? First off the visible yellow dust that covers every surface ...
Researchers at UT Arlington and other universities developed an artificial intelligence system capable of distinguishing between fir, spruce and pine tree pollen with 99% accuracy. The University of ...
If pine pollen is a plague that keeps you locked indoors for three weeks in spring, you can open your eyes — and your windows — again in the next three to seven days. It’s almost over. Grains of ...
Jeremy Siegel: This is GBH’s Morning Edition. We’ve had a good patch of weather with blossoms everywhere you turn, and this is causing some issues for people who suffer from seasonal allergies. Here ...
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