Yep,
For the last week or so I've had those symptoms, for a while I thought I had a cold but eventually the penny dropped, my weather app tells me that currently the local pollen count is high.
n2
Anyone else suffering? My nose is running like a tap and eyes are itchy and red. I think it’s birch pollen that does it for me.
I’ve had this all my life, but only recently connected it to tree pollen as I don’t get hay fever. Also I can’t eat common fruits now, as the tree pollen collects in the skin and gives my mouth an allergic reaction (tingling).
The tree pollen allergy season is much earlier than hay fever season, and kicks off in February. The current unseasonable warm weather has made it worse than usual for me.
So, if you are wandering why you have the sniffles at the moment, but don’t have a cold, it probably you’re allergic to tree pollen.
Yep,
For the last week or so I've had those symptoms, for a while I thought I had a cold but eventually the penny dropped, my weather app tells me that currently the local pollen count is high.
n2
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
"You gotta know when to hold em and know when to fold em".
Yep, me too. Nose is running like a tap and I'm having sneezing fits every 10 mins or so*.....I'm sure my colleagues wish I was WFH today!
*This is despite taking a "1-a-day" antihistamine tablet and several snorts of nasal spray. I ordered a nettie pot, which is due to be delivered today and hope that nasal/sinus rinse helps calm things down a bit.
I’m not sure cycling to work is helping me much. I may as well be snorting the branches.
I get hayfever but usually escape these early tree pollen months. However, I worked at Chelsea Flower Show one year and the stall was on the avenue of plane trees. Within 15 minutes I was ruined. It was worse than any symptoms I'd ever had, even as a child when summers were something to be endured.
After an hour I had to go home because I looked (and felt) like a withdrawing junkie. I can't work at Chelsea now, much to my boss's chagrin
My son has both tree and grass pollen allergies. He is currently undergoing immunotherapy where he ingests a variety of pollens (programme run by St Thomas') so hopefully we get a good result and the symptoms reduce.
I also get hay fever, usually start early (late March). I`ve had sore eyes for a week, seemed to coincide with the unseasonal warm weather, so I wondered whether it was pollen-related. Reading this, it seems I`m not alone!
It's always my eyes that cause me problems, I can put up with the other symptoms but I always use antihistamine eyedrops, usually start in April and use them until mid-late July. Can`t get my head around using them in late February!
Very strange weather, can`t ever remember a warm spell like this so early in the year.
Edit: Just done a bit of Googling on this, some of the newspapers have picked up on the early release of tree pollen. However, in true sensational style they refer to 'hay fever misery'! They always paint a picture of people having to stay indoors and having their lives blighted by this complaint; OK there may be a tiny minority of sufferers who do this but for the vast majority it's an irritation (literally) that they learn to put up with, the modern medications are excellent and I`m sure the majority (like me) don't let hay fever stop them doing what they want to do.......but the daft sods who write the papers always have to sensationalise everything and claim it causes 'misery'. FFS it's hay fever, not leprosy!
Last edited by walkerwek1958; 27th February 2019 at 12:48.
Interesting that we are discussing pollen allergy / hayfever in February! I went for a bike ride across the moor yesterday and came back with the sniffles - never imagined it could be tree pollen.
Also interesting to read the comment about tree pollen collecting in the skin of fruit. I noticed a while ago that eating an apple would make me cough. Never really understood why but now I have a theory to work on!
I remembered this from Russia...imagine living there!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gDLCmZs5dr8
Several years ago I developed a mild allergy to apples and pears, not enough to stop me eating them but significant enough to be mildly uncomfortable. I get tingling around the lips and throat for around 10 mins, then it goes away. I've tried washing fruit very thoroughly but it has no effect. Never thought it could be pollen-related.
Allergies are weird, and seem to be on the increase theseadays.
Just googled "apple allergy" and it appears to be well established topic with people who suffer from hayfever sometimes affected. Also associated links with birch tree pollen allergy, which I have noticed previously. Interesting.
Grass pollen here.Not kicked in yet but any time soon!!!
Yep. I have only had it for the last 10 years or so. My fruit allergy started about 5 years ago.
The fruit allergy was diagnosed as Oral Allergy Syndrome. I had the skin scratch tests and didn’t react. My GP sent me for tests because I nearly lost my voice, for an hour or so, after eating a plum.
i have some kind of field maple planted extensively around where i live and suffer around may/june when they are flowering. only developed hay fever in the last few years but it seems to be mostly tree pollen and i don't get it as bad as a lot of people.
have an irritated throat right now but i think thats due to the very bad pollution event happening all over the country (except the government don't like to announce the fact the air is making you ill)
Yep.. started last week for me. Thankfully it only lasts a couple of months for me.
I take a prescription antihistamine and nose spray which does the trick.
Would recommend anyone who suffers see a GP. Sorted me right out and they give me 3 months of pills on one prescription.
My eyes were really itchy today and still are now.
Another sufferer here. Mine's not helped by swimming and will get particularly 'character-building' when the OW season starts for me in April.
Yesterday’s rain has been very welcome as it has knocked all of the pollen out of the air.
Overnight my itchy eyes and steaming nose has disappeared.
Yep, normally get the grass pollen but this year I thought it was early, bloomin trees!! Anyway, the missus got me this-for my snotty head cold, but actually works brilliantly for hay fever too. Sterimar, sterile sea water spray, no drugs, a few squirts of this up your hooter throughout the day and it cleans you right out!
I’ve had ‘Hayfever’ since my teens. Always blighted my summers.
Until a few years ago I had the full allergy test that identified tree pollen as the main allergen. Trouble was it struck early and after being sensitised any other pollen would irritate me.
After the results I was advised to take 1-a-day loratadine tablets and Beclometasone dipropionate nasal spray from Feb to Sept.
Both are cheap over the counter meds.
Works for me.
z
Settled weather is back and so is my tree pollen allergy.
Thought I may be coming down with mild symptoms of CV19, but then realised it is late March and the tree pollen season is now underway.
Itchy eyes and a streaming nose for the next six weeks or so for me.
Don't anti histamines work very well for you?
All 3 of us in the house have started in the last week, spell of sunny weather but today windy which is worse combination. I am lucky that 1 pill in the morning
stops it fairly quickly but tend to wake up a bit bunged up and sneeze a lot for the first 30 mins before the pill kicks in.
Mine started a few days ago. Itchy eyes started today. I also get a very light cough, which I am suppressing when out of the house!
I am really suffering now. This year appears on a different scale for pollen. Literally hundreds of sneezes a day.
I know, in the scheme of things it is no big deal.
Yes I am. the farmer is doing something in the field and making it worse
These girls love it: (although the pollen in the air that causes allergies is not the same size as the pollen collected by bees for protein source):
https://photos.smugmug.com/Hobbies/O..._3152-1280.mp4
Yep suffering badly this year. Having to use an inhaler for the first time in a while. Not great given the current situation!
Me too. Must admit my coughing and sneezing in Sainsbury's this PM got me plenty of room to shop!
[QUOTE=MartynJC (UK);5383088]These girls love it: (although the pollen in the air that causes allergies is not the same size as the pollen collected by bees for protein source):
So, does that mean that sourcing local honey would not help?
[QUOTE=Rob Leeds;5383120]Looking at the literature there needs to be more scientific studies done. However I don’t think the pharmaceuticals are too keen to promote natural products over drugs. And also if honey had proven medicinal properties it might become much more difficult to buy - if it is classed a medicine.
So, I would suggest making your own empirical tests to see if eating local (as in UK bee keepers) sourced honey, makes a difference. The pollen in honey is from flowers etc whereas the pollen that causes hay fever is from grasses and trees. Nevertheless - honey is a complex liquid and some swear by its efficacy! It tastes good too!
try whole wax and honey
I’m suffering more than usual this year, started approx 3 weeks ago. I use anti-histamine eye drops to control the itchy eyes, for me that’s the worst thing. Thankfully I don’t suffer badly enough to need inhalers or take tablets, it’s more of a nuisance than an illness, but I never let it stop me doing what I want in summer.
In recent years I’ve eaten honey regularly over the winter, but didn’t this year. Coincidence?......maybe.
I can’t say I enjoy hay fever but I associate it with spring/ summer which I do enjoy, in a funny sort of way I welcome the hay fever symptoms because it means the nice weather is on its way!
I take tablets daily from late March through to September, but actually the best thing I have found for a good night sleep and not having bad symptoms first thing in the morning is an air purifier in the bedroom. It’s amazing how much dust it sucks out of the air and collects on the filter.
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I used to have an Airfree purifier and initially thought it helped me sleep better but I came to the conclusion that it was probably a placebo effect. Reviews seem to vary between, “cured all symptoms” to “did absolutely nothing”. Looking back, I can’t really see how it would work without a fan of some description as convection alone surely wouldn’t be enough to recycle a good proportion of the air in a moderately sized room.
Also interested in this ^^^
I’ve had hayfever for years and always seem to suffer more in spring, but I’m getting absolutely rinsed this year! Keep waking up in the middle of the night because of it. Tablets and nasal sprays etc barely seem to make a dent so I’m open to trying anything really
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I have a Blueair 480i in my bedroom, and some smaller Blueair units in the kids bedrooms. They aren’t cheap, but are well made and I find them effective. Aside from my hay fever I got them to reduce the amount of pollution that my kids breathe, as we live in London.
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well, summer is well and truly here. back to showering 2-3x per day, constant washing my face/eyes in the sink and 3x180mg fexofenadine per day. i give it another 2-3 weeks until i need steroids and an inhaler. i don't mind the tablets and the washing my face constantly but i could really do without the constant pounding headache from sneezing all day, every day.