Monthly Archives: May 2018

When Pittsburgh’s Air Smells Bad

Smelly air in Pittsburgh is marked on the map, 2 May 2018 (screenshot from Smell PGH)
Pittsburgh’s smelly air is on the map, 2 May 2018 (screenshot from Smell PGH)

For more than a century Pittsburgh was The Smoky City with air so bad we were called hell with the lid off.  After World War II we transformed ourselves with clean air laws enforced by the Allegheny County Health Department.  The smoke is gone and we’re looking good, but Pittsburgh is still one of the top 10 most polluted places in the U.S.

You can’t see our bad air anymore but some days you can smell it.  Yesterday was one of those days.

The Smell PGH map above (May 2) has a colored triangle for every air quality report made on the crowd-sourced app. The darker red the triangle, the worse the air smelled to the person who made the report to the Allegheny County Health Department.  At the bottom right, May 2 has a black square above it (bad air!).  So do May 1 and April 27.  You can see our smelly days.

The reports are easy to make.  I downloaded the app and followed the directions at the Smell PGH website:

  1. Rate the air with a color
  2. Describe it. For instance: industrial, rotten eggs, etc
  3. If you have symptoms from the air, describe them
  4. Click [Smell Report]
Smell PGH reporting panel (screenshot from Smell PGH website)
Smell PGH reporting panel (screenshot from Smell PGH website)

As soon as you press [Smell Report] your colored triangle sends a message to the Allegheny County Health Department and the app shows you the current map.  Don’t forget to enter your name and email address under Settings for more impact.

I used to think I was alone when I noticed bad air days.  The app has changed my outlook. Find out more at the Smell PGH website.

 

p.s. The weather changed.  Today, May 3, 2018, is much better.

(screenshots from the Smell PGH website)

Let’s Talk About Coyotes

Eastern coyote (photo by ForestWander via Wikimedia Commons)
Eastern coyote (photo by ForestWander via Wikimedia Commons)

Taking a break from peregrines today …   Let’s talk about coyotes.

Last fall a coyote showed up in my city neighborhood and was seen at dusk in several locations before he moved on a month later.

Coyote in the City of Pittsburgh, October 2017 (photo by Luanne Lavelle)
Coyote in the City of Pittsburgh, October 2017 (photo by Luanne Lavelle)

We were all surprised that a wild animal chose to be among us and it made me curious. Why would a coyote come to town?  How did coyotes get here?

The answers became a radio piece on The Allegheny Front last week.  Listen to the story here:  When Coyotes Come To Town

Even when coyotes are present they are rarely seen but are sometimes heard.  In urban settings they respond to sirens (click here for a sirens video from Tucson, Arizona(*)

Friends in Pittsburgh tell me they’ve heard coyotes in Sewickley Heights Park, Scott Township, and Hazelwood Greenway.

Have you heard coyotes near you?  Leave a comment and let me know.

 

(photo credits: Coyote closeup by ForestWander via Wikimedia Commons. Click on the image to see the original. Coyote in Greenfield in October 2017 by Luanne Lavelle)

(*) p.s. Every time I listen to the Tucson video it makes me laugh.  The siren wails, the coyotes wail back.  On and on.