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[personal profile] celticdragonfly
Okay, we are back, and we are alive. The house is standing, unbroken into, and the cats are alive, well, and gratifyingly eager to see us. We have [livejournal.com profile] phoenixsinger with us for a visit.

That's about it on the good news report. We're getting somewhat better on the whole miserably sick thing. Until we got into this section of Texas. Wow. I'd been nervously reading the fire reports. Still, the air quality is way worse than I'd expected. Horrible smoky haze all over everything. Pray for rain. This is awful. Dante will be wandering by any time now, I'm sure of it. Air quality that makes me *grateful* that my asthmatic son Brendan is currently in Los Angeles is bad.

Anybody have information about air cleaners? The electronic doohickeys you buy? I've always figured they were probably too expensive, but maybe we want one, if we want me to keep breathing well all week. [livejournal.com profile] selenite suggests I go look a bunch up online, and I've tried that before, but I just get hopelessly confused because I don't know what I'm looking at.

The place is, of course, a chaotic mess from the pre-trip pre-Xmas prep. I have a lot of housecleaning to do this week.

More when we've rested a bit. Looking forward to chatting with friends again.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-01-02 06:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scherzoid.livejournal.com
Yay that the fires aren't anywhere near your house! Hope that trend continues...

There are two main types of air cleaners out there. The first are HEPA cleaners, which basically use a big fan to suck air through a filter. The main drawbacks are having to replace the filter every now and then, and the fact that that big fan is inevitably going to produce some level of white noise, which you might find annoying.

The second type is ionizing air cleaners, like the Ionic Breeze from Sharper Image. They work by imparting a positive electrical charge onto incoming air -- and the particulates contained in it, which are then trapped by negatively-charged metal plates, which you wipe clean with a damp sponge every now and then. The upshot of this method is that it's COMPLETLEY silent. Unfortunately, a byproduct of the ionization process is ozone, which can exacerbate health problems in some people. It's a major asthma trigger for me, and it drove my wife absolutely nuts during the "bionic nose" phase of her pregnancy. Our Ionic Breeze has been sitting unplugged for almost a year now. Of course, so has our HEPA cleaner -- replacing our carpets with hardwood floors has made it much easier to keep a relatively allergen-free home.

Another option might be an electrostatic air filter in your AC/furnace system. We had one of those when I was growing up, and ozone was never a problem.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-01-02 11:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] celticdragonfly.livejournal.com
Thanks for the advice. Karl went out and bought a big HEPA filter. It's running. The noise isn't too bad.

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