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HEALTH

Warm weather sparks early hay fever

Hay fever, which affects one in five Germans, has struck early this year as an unusually warm weekend kick-started pollen production, setting noses running and eyes watering weeks ahead of schedule.

Warm weather sparks early hay fever
Photo: DPA

Temperatures reached at least 20 degrees Celsius in many parts of the country last weekend – perfect conditions for birch trees to start releasing pollen, which is at its most irritating in the spring.

And as a string of sunny, breezy days are now expected, sufferers are unlikely to get relief any time soon as prolonged rainfall would be needed to stop birch trees in their tracks, meteorologist Jörg Riemann from the Berlin Meteogroup told Monday’s Die Welt newspaper.

“It’s far too warm for this time of year,” Riemann said. “The absolute upper limit for this time of year is 20 degrees, anymore shouldn’t be happening.”

Germany’s alder trees were almost ready to begin pumping out pollen at the beginning of the year due to an unusually warm January, but were stopped in their tracks by the extreme cold snap in February.

Birch pollen does not usually start triggering hay fever around the middle of April, giving a period of relief for sufferers in March, when Alder tree pollen has generally settled down.

“This will not happen this year,” Riemann told Die Welt.

Hay fever season is much longer than it was 25 years ago due to climate change, which has extended by 11 days the time in which enough birch pollen is in the air to cause an allergic reaction, since 1989. The itch-inducing pollen now swirls around for about 36 days of the year.

More than a third of Germans have some sort of allergy, and hay fever – a pollen allergy – is the most common according to recently published data by polling company Forsa.

Of the 1,000 people the polling organisation asked, more than half described their affliction as a burden.

DPA/The Local/jcw

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WEATHER

‘Turbo spring’: Germany to see temperatures above 25C

Germany is set for a blast of warm weather in the coming week as the colder spell eases off.

'Turbo spring': Germany to see temperatures above 25C

“The late winter weather of the past few days with frost and snow is a thing of the past for the time being, and spring will kick into turbo gear over the next few days,” said meteorologist Adrian Leyser from the German Weather Service (DWD) on Friday.

Temperatures are expected to rise sharply over the weekend with plenty of sunshine, forecasters said. In Germany anything above 25C is classed as a summer day. “The summer mark of 25C will be cracked regionally as early as Sunday,” said Leyser.

It comes as snow and hail hit Germany last week, and temperatures fell below freezing in some places.

But showers and thunderstorms are still possible in the west and north of Germany. Maximum temperatures there are expected to reach around 20C. 

According to the DWD, spring will get a little damper on Monday, with a few rain spells.  “However, the next low pressure system over Western Europe is preparing to turn on the warm air jet again from Tuesday,” said the meteorologist.

On Wednesday – which is a public holiday across Germany for International Workers’ Day – temperatures could soar nearer 30C. 

“In the south and east, we are even approaching the 30C mark,” said Leyser. However, the weather will remain “susceptible to disruption”, said Leyser, especially in the west where there is a risk of isolated and sometimes severe thunderstorms.

READ ALSO: What to do on May 1st in Germany

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