Guest guest Posted June 9, 2007 Report Share Posted June 9, 2007 Yes , I'm in County, KY, 5 minutes from Cinci. Hamilton County EPA says about 4,000 mold spores and this naaa- whatever says 15,000 but both use a scale from low to high severity say the count is in 'high' category, not severe, so probably using different size air masses, but agree on conclusion. I sent them both an email to try to find out how much air they measure, so I can compare. Anyway, amazingly many cities have no mold counting stations but pollen only and how many people are seriously hurt by tree pollen? You can sign up to get pollen/mold count email when it is counted, sent to you. I wish I lived somewhere else. If I survive this, I am going to move. I guess that is backward, perhaps should move so that I can survive this. Moving out of a house is something I'd rather not take on right now. I checked about a third of the cities listed and Dayton, OH was highest right now, higher than TX and FL cities, with the exception of Pitsburgh, which was 1k higher. We have had drought conditions here also. Grass looks burnt. Cities in CA I checked were pretty low and Albany, New York just had *104 compared to 13k Dayton (just changed). Los Alamos, NM. reading, was 'absent'/zero mold', rather than 'not counted' which is when there is no counting done. I wonder if that was a typo or accurate at the time. Although moving doesn't appeal to me, if those are the type of counts they get there, I could be motivated to go by that. --- In , " " <toriaquilts@...> wrote: > > you must be CLOSE to me, barb! > victoria > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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