[My] Life in Wisconsin

State of the Air: The 2009 Report


http://www.stateoftheair.org/
Click on the above link to find out how the air you breathe is directly affected by OUTSIDE standards. Then maybe stop worrying about a few smokers.
There is always "worse"...

XOXO
Anne

FYI:
I live in Brown County, Wisconsin.
It got an "F".

What's your rating?


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Breathing polluted air can seriously harm your health and even shorten your life.
For 10 years, the American Lung Association has used data from state air quality monitors to produce its annual State of the Air report.

The more you learn about the air you breathe, the more you can protect your health and take steps to make our cleaner and healthier.

FACT: Steps you can take to improve air quality will also help fight climate change.
Drive less.
Don’t burn wood or trash.
Use less electricity.
Make sure your school system requires clean buses.

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090429/ap_on_sc/polluted_cities;_ylt=AoMW6nM4M_E4rchjISrzZwjWDrMF;_ylu=X3oDMTE5OGF1ZWUwBHBvcwM1BHNlYwN5bi1tb3N0LXZpZXdlZARzbGsDcmVwb3J0bW9zdGFt

Report: Most Americans in areas with unhealthy air

Tuesday April 28, 2009. Sixty percent of Americans live in areas …
By NOAKI SCHWARTZ, Associated Press Writer Noaki Schwartz, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 12 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – Sixty percent of Americans live in areas with unhealthy air pollution levels, despite a growing green movement and more stringent laws aimed at improving air quality, the American Lung Association said in a report released Wednesday.

The public-health group ranked the pollution levels of U.S. cities and counties based on air quality measurements that state and local agencies reported to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency between 2005 and 2007.

Overall, the report found that air pollution at times reaches unhealthy levels in almost every major city and that 186.1 million people live in those areas. The number is much higher than last year's figure of about 125 million people because recent changes to the federal ozone standard mean more counties recognize unhealthy levels of pollution.

Health effects from air pollution include changes in lung function, coughing, heart attacks, lung cancer and premature death.

"Six out of 10 Americans right now as we speak live in areas where the air can be dirty enough to send people to the emergency room, dirty enough to shape how kids' lungs develop and even dirty enough to kill," said Janice E. Nolen, the association's assistant vice president on national policy and advocacy.

Cities including Los Angeles, New York, Atlanta, Charlotte, Philadelphia, Washington D.C. and Baltimore have seen improvements in air quality over the last decade, the report said.

The Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside region of Southern California remained the metropolitan area with the highest levels of ozone pollution, as it has in each of the past 10 reports. Other metropolitan areas considered to have the most ozone pollution included Houston-Baytown-Huntsville and Dallas-Fort Worth in Texas.

The areas with the most short-term particle pollution or soot were Pittsburgh-New Castle, Pa.; and the California areas of Fresno-Madera, Bakersfield and Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside.

The cleanest metro area in all categories was Fargo, N.D.

The rankings in the "State of the Air Report" were based on ozone pollution levels produced when heat and sunlight come into contact with pollutants from power plants, cars, refineries and other sources.

The lung association also studied short-term and year-round levels of particle pollution, which is made up of a mix of tiny solid and liquid particles in the air.

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http://www.stateoftheair.org/2009/health-risks/overview.html

State of the Air: 2009 Health Risks Overview

Ozone and particle pollution are the most widespread air pollutants and among the most dangerous. Recent research has revealed new insights into how they can harm the body including taking the lives of infants and altering the lungs of children. All in all, the evidence shows that the risks are greater than we once thought. Recent findings provide more evidence about the health impacts of these pollutants:

* Reducing air pollution has extended life expectancy. Thanks to a drop in particle pollution between 1980 and 2000, life expectancy in 51 U.S. cities increased by 5 months on average, according to a recent analysis.

* The annual death toll from particle pollution may be even greater than previously understood. The California Air Resources Board recently tripled the estimate of premature deaths in California from particle pollution to 18,000 annually.

* Long term exposure to air pollution.especially from highway traffic.harms women, even while in their 50s. Exposure to particle pollution to appears to increase women's risk of lower lung function, developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and dying prematurely.

* Busy highways are high risk zones. Pollution from heavy highway traffic contributes to higher risks for heart attack, allergies, premature births and the death of infants around the time they are born. New studies looking at the impact of traffic pollution even in cities with generally cleaner air expanded the concern over the health effects of chronic exposure to exhaust from heavy traffic.

* Ozone pollution can shorten life, a conclusion confirmed by the latest scientific review by the National Research Council. New evidence appeared that some segments of the population may face higher risks from dying prematurely because of ozone pollution, including communities with high unemployment or high public transit use and Blacks.

* Truck drivers, dockworkers and railroad workers may face higher risk of death from lung cancer and COPD from breathing diesel emissions on the job. Studies found that these workers who inhaled diesel exhaust on the job were much more likely to die from lung cancer, COPD and heart disease.

Two types of air pollution dominate the problem in the U.S.. ozone and particle pollution. They aren't the only serious air pollutants: others include carbon monoxide, lead, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide, as well as hundreds of toxic substances. However, ozone and particle pollution represent the most widespread.

Psychic Dogs and Naked Chickens

http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/odd/archives/002736.asp
Odd Wisconsin Archive
Psychic Dogs and Naked Chickens

Tornado season is here again. Huge storms are crossing the Mississippi as we write tonight, prompting a reminder that everyone needs to be ready when the sirens sound.

On June 12, 1899, there were no sirens when a tornado struck New Richmond, in St. Croix Co. and 117 people died. Because a circus was in town, the town's population swelled as visitors came in from outlying areas. Shortly after the performance ended, the tornado passed through the very center of town, leveling a strip 1,000 feet wide and 3,000 feet long. More than 300 buildings were destroyed and multiple deaths were reported in at least 26 families. Six families had four or more deaths.

Although there were no sirens, there were some mysterious warning signs. Many of New Richmond's animals appeared to sense the tornado coming long before it arrived.

"There was something very remarkable in the actions of animals previous to the storm," Mrs. Boehm wrote the next year in her book about the disaster. "They seemed without exception as far as I could learn to be unrestful, nervous, and incapable of being quieted though cared for and petted more than usual. There was a Jersey-Holstein cow, the property of Mr. Jas. Link. This fine animal kept up a continual mowing for days previous to the cyclone...

"One very large St. Bernard dog. also the property of Mr. Link, exhibited more than ordinary uneasiness. The faithful animal showed more affection than usual, particularly towards his mistress. The animal left home a few hours before the cyclone struck and returned safely the day after. The poor faithful 'Judge' returned to find his master's home in ruins, and to seek in vain for his dead mistress."

She goes on to say that, "I learned that over thirty dogs left their homes like Judge a few hours before the storm and took refuge under an embankment out of the path of the tornado. Next day the poor dogs were seen returning, a few at a time, with heads low on the ground. Likely they were forced by hunger to leave their retreat. Those that did seemed to be seeking their lost owners."

Of course, most animals did not escape the tornado. "Whole flocks of chickens could be seen alive, denuded of feathers... Again, one would see hens deprived of their feathers only in part. One old hen was going around quite lively with one side completely denuded, the other side covered as usual." Large mammals were not as lucky. At least 360 horses died, and the number of cows put out of their misery was too large to be tallied accurately.

You can see a list of Wisconsin's major tornadoes in our online Dictionary of Wisconsin History, and learn more about them by following the links there. A selection of historic photos showing tornado damage is also available at Wisconsin Historical Images.
http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=10467&search_term=torna

For information about how to protect yourself in tornadoes, visit this page provided by the American Red Cross.
http://www.redcross.org/portal/site/en/menuitem.86f46a12f382290517a8f210b80f78a0/?vgnextoid=62a7da30df3ea110VgnVCM10000030f3870aRCRD&vgnextfmt=default

Plan your safe refuge now, before the dog starts pacing and the sirens go off.


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Love to all

XOXO
Me

Ten Thoughts


Good Evening Everyone-
I miss you.
Yes YOU!
Is it me, or are people disappearing from here?
Maybe it's the weather and many of us are outside where we belong in Spring.
Maybe I don't know where you went or how to get in touch with you.
My email address is Anna_Loves_Life@Yahoo.com - (Or, if you have it, you can always use the Farm one).
They both go to the same inbox. Drop me a line.

Let's see...



#1.
It is Spring- and time for all the little flowers to bloom.

I even found one...
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Dandelion

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#2.
Casey drove out today.

A bit of lingering pain, but more energy than I have seen in a long while!

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Casey
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She had to leave shortly before Miss Kelli picked up Mr Miller.
Soon as Miss Kelli came, so did Miss Michelle!

How cool to be able to sit outside and chat!
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Kelli and Michelle 2



#3.
I had a dentist appointment this morning.
Yes, I have to go back. Oh well.



#4.
I love stuff like this page...
"Rain before 7, Clear by 11" (A bit of weather lore) CLICK HERE.

"The Shepherd's Barometer, or certain rules to judge the weather, grounded on 50 years' experience and observations by an ancient English shepherd, 1812."

#5.
Punk likes to ride fast with her snout out the window.

This makes her jowls flap in the wind.
They make some really funny noises.
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Punk Lips
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Yet she gives me a funny look if I laugh out loud at her?
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Punk Snout
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#6.
Mr Miller has been able to come over most days...
Punk and Miller play well together- as long as Punk is willing to share.
hehehe ........... (She's not spoiled, she always smells that way)?

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Punk & Miller Water
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#7.
Mr Miller has a tendency to pout if/when he doesn't get his way.
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Miller Mr
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#8.
I believe I shall have many pears this year-
Enough for here, the 2 horses, and for the deer at Gritters place too!
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pears
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#9.
I caught this guy on the side of the road, eying some food in the fields
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Hawk in Tree
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He flew off when I got out of the car to get a better picture though-
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Hawk in Flight
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#10.
Food.
Anyone up for a bowl of homemade (and loaded) baked beans?
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2Baked Beans

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Hope all is well in your little corner of creation.
Have a "wunnaful" Wednesday!
My love to all.

XOXO
Me

Posted to Y! 360, Tuesday April 28, 2009 - 10:40pm (CDT)