As air pollution from Canadian wildfires keeps drifting south this summer, you have many ways to reduce your risk from breathing filthy air on thick smoke days.
Air quality in New York City was the worst on the planet on Wednesday, turning skies orange and the air hazardous for everyone.
Minnesota has set more modest records: The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has already issued six air quality alerts covering 11 days, when normally it might only warn about polluted skies once or twice a year, according to air quality meteorologist David Brown.
It's likely more days of bad air will come — not only are fires burning in the west in Alberta and Saskatchewan, and in the east in Quebec, but new blazes have erupted in Ontario, directly north of Minnesota, Brown said. The next plume could arrive Friday.
"We're kind of surrounded at this point. Any wind direction is likely going to bring some smoke now," Brown said.
Here are some tips to stay safe, whenever haze descends again:
Pay attention to air quality readings
The Air Quality Index, or AQI, measures risk from dirty air on a scale of 0 to 500. The AQI doesn't measure the amount of a specific pollutant but generally reflects health impact, Brown said.
The Environmental Protection Agency's AirNow site offers real-time readings of AQI and also shows where fires are burning and where smoke is wafting. Purple Air, a company that makes air sensors, also has a network of AQI sensor readings at map.purpleair.com.