Learn how to safely harvest pine pollen, store it to maintain freshness, and use it in your diet and wellness practices.
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 ...
Pine tree pollen seems to coat most of the South in sticky yellow gunk every spring. But there are many types of trees that contribute to the seasonal pollen count, which measures how much pollen is ...
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. Dr. Robert ...
Imagine trying to tell identical twins apart just by looking at their fingerprints. That's how challenging it can be for scientists to distinguish the tiny powdery pollen grains produced by fir, ...
Right now, in late March, the big culprit is tree pollen. The yellow that you’re seeing right now is from our pine trees. But we are also seeing oak and Birch. Weed pollen is considered low right now, ...
The clocks sprang forward last weekend and North Carolina is leaping right into pollen season. The state Department of Environmental Quality, which measures the amount of pollen in the air, says ...
Atlanta shattered a record on Saturday, March 29, when it recorded nearly 15,000 pollens grains per cubic meter of air. The previous record of 9,368 was blown away with the 14,801 reading by Atlanta ...