Submissions     Contact     Advertise     Donate     BlogRoll     Subscribe                         

Thursday, May 7, 2026

State Of Utah: What Are We Breathing?

Pollution In Salt Lake City

State of Utah: What are we breathing? What is the truth about Great Salt Lake dust and your family’s air quality? If you live along Utah’s Wasatch Front, you’ve probably noticed those hazy, brownish clouds that roll through in the spring and fall. What most people don’t realize is that some of what we are breathing may be coming directly from the drying lakebed of the Great Salt Lake. This post breaks down what’s in that dust, where it comes from, who’s most at risk, and how you can check the air quality in your own state.

Why Am I Writing About This

My friend, Harry from Texas, who’s in our forum, sent me a link about the dangers of the Great Salt Lake. I had no idea. We had already moved up North, closer to the Great Salt Lake, and our house was soon under construction. We were locked in. No way to stop once you start to build. I know we worry about what we eat and drink, but please think about the air you breathe. It’s not fun being tied to an oxygen tube 24/7. It’s emotionally draining. I never smoked or vaped, just giving you a heads up. Looking back, I think I needed oxygen in Southern Utah. I thought I couldn’t walk ten feet because I needed to lose weight. Now I believe I was breathing the exhaust from trucks and cars in our backyard near the freeway that scarred my lungs. We’ll never know the full cause. We had a neighbor in Southern Utah who also lived near the freeway, and she died from Pulmonary Fibrosis (same as my lung disease) last year; is that a coincidence? I think not.

Smog in the Valley Below Mt. Timpanogos Utah

Where Is the Great Salt Lake?

The Great Salt Lake is located in northern Utah at approximately 41 degrees North latitude and 112 degrees West longitude. At a healthy water level, it covers around 1,700 square miles and stretches up to 75 miles long and 28 miles wide, making it the largest saltwater lake in the Western Hemisphere. Salt Lake City, Ogden, Bountiful, Provo, and dozens of other communities sit just to the east along the base of the Wasatch Mountains, a region commonly called the Wasatch Front.

The lake has no outlet. Water leaves only through evaporation, so any minerals, salts, or contaminants that flow in over time remain and concentrate in the lakebed sediments.

The Lake Is Shrinking Fast

Here is where the air quality story begins. At its historic peak in 1987, the lake covered roughly 3,300 square miles. By late 2025, the surface of the lake’s south arm had dropped to an elevation of 4,191.1 feet, the third-lowest recorded level in more than 120 years of recordkeeping. As the water recedes, it exposes dry lakebed sediment to the open air and the wind.

According to researchers at the University of Utah, the shrinking lake is now exposing over 750 square miles of lakebed. That is more than 750 square miles of bare, dry sediment sitting in the desert, available to be picked up by the wind and carried directly into the neighborhoods where hundreds of thousands of people live and breathe.

What Is Actually in Great Salt Lake Dust?

This is the part that matters most for families. Great Salt Lake dust isn’t just ordinary dirt. It’s a mixture of airborne particulate matter from surrounding desert soils and, depending on wind direction, dried sediment from the lakebed itself.

Scientists at the Utah Department of Environmental Quality explain that the exposed lakebed sediments contain heavy metals that accumulated over the past century from both human industrial activity and natural geological processes. Studies have detected elevated levels of copper, cadmium, and lead in dust collected in Salt Lake City and Provo compared to upwind, cleaner areas. A 2026 study published in Atmospheric Environment found that leafy vegetables exposed to Great Salt Lake dust contained elevated levels of arsenic and uranium even after thorough washing, suggesting the dust may pose a dietary risk in addition to an airborne one.

The dust particles fall into two categories that health officials track closely:

PM10: larger particles up to 10 micrometers in diameter, which can be inhaled into the nose, throat, and upper airways.

PM2.5: fine particles 2.5 micrometers or smaller, which travel deep into the lungs and may enter the bloodstream.

The EPA’s current health standard for PM10 is 150 micrograms per cubic meter of air, measured over a 24-hour period. Between 2023 and 2025, monitoring stations near the Great Salt Lake recorded exceedances of that standard at Hawthorne, Prison, and Tech monitoring stations in the Salt Lake area.

How Dust Storms Form

Great Salt Lake dust events don’t happen randomly. They have a pattern that families can learn to anticipate. The peak season runs from March through May, when cold fronts push strong winds across the dry lakebed, carrying sediment plumes toward Wasatch Front communities. Dust events can also occur in summer when thunderstorms generate sudden gusts. These events are typically short, sometimes lasting only a few hours, but the spike in particulate matter during that window can be significant.

Farmington Bay, located on the southeastern edge of the lake near the cities of Farmington and Bountiful, has emerged as a particularly active area. As water levels in Farmington Bay dropped, more than 120 square miles in that area became exposed, creating concentrated dust hotspots that scientists have been mapping and monitoring.

What Does This Dust Do to Your Body?

Researchers at the University of Utah’s Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology published a study in early 2026 that provided a clearer picture of what happens inside the lungs when Great Salt Lake dust is inhaled. The team found that the dust triggers inflammation by activating Transient Receptor Potential channels, proteins in airway cells that normally respond to stimuli such as capsaicin in chili peppers or the cooling sensation of mint. When these receptors are activated by dust particles, they can damage airway tissue and set off an inflammatory response.

Lead researcher Dr. Christopher Reilly noted that Great Salt Lake dust produced stronger effects in the lungs at lower doses than other particle pollutants his team had studied, including coal fly ash, wood smoke, cigarette smoke, and diesel exhaust. Chronic low-level exposure, not just during visible dust storms, is also a concern because it can produce asthma-like changes in the lungs over time.

Roughly 10 percent of Utah’s population has asthma, and health officials say that people with existing respiratory conditions, children, older individuals, and those who are outdoors frequently face the greatest risk.

Who Is Monitoring the Air?

Utah has been expanding its air quality monitoring network in response to growing dust concerns. The Utah Division of Air Quality now operates a 20-station network called UDORN across the Wasatch Front that tracks dust sources, heavy metal composition, and public health risks. In late 2023, four new PM10 filter monitors were added at stations near the lake, including Lake Park, Prison, Brigham City, and Bountiful Viewmont, increasing sampling from every six days to daily.

The University of Utah is also conducting an active research study through December 2026, funded by the state’s Science for Solutions grant program, to better quantify how much Great Salt Lake dust reaches communities and to determine its full composition.

Governor Spencer Cox requested $650,000 in ongoing funding for expanded dust monitoring in 2025, though the legislature ultimately passed $150,000 for the network. Researchers say Utah is still under-monitored compared to similarly situated saline lakes in California.

What Families Can Do Right Now

You don’t have to wait for policy changes to protect your household. Here are practical steps based on guidance from University of Utah researchers and public health officials:

On days when visible dust is present or high-wind warnings are issued, keep windows closed and limit time outdoors.

Refrain from exercising outside during dust storms. Physical activity increases how deeply and frequently you breathe, which increases the amount of particles that reach your lungs.

Consider wearing an N95 or KN95 mask if you must be outside during a dust event. These are the same masks recommended during wildfire smoke events.

Check the air quality before outdoor activities. The website AirNow.gov, operated by the EPA, shows real-time air quality data for locations across the United States using the Air Quality Index, or AQI. You can enter any ZIP code to see current PM2.5 and PM10 levels.

If anyone in your household has asthma, keep rescue inhalers readily accessible and follow your doctor’s guidance on air-quality thresholds.

How to Check Air Quality in Your Own State

The Great Salt Lake isn’t the only drying lake creating dust hazards in the United States. California’s Owens Lake and the Salton Sea have faced similar challenges, and researchers say lake desiccation is a growing global problem tied to both climate change and increased human and industrial water use. Here is how anyone in any state can stay informed:

AirNow.gov is the most comprehensive free resource. It’s run by the EPA and shows current AQI levels for particulate matter, ozone, and other pollutants. You can also sign up for air quality alerts by email or text for your ZIP code.

PurpleAir.com provides a live map of community air quality sensors from low-cost monitors installed by individuals and organizations across the country. It offers a more granular, neighborhood-level view.

Your state’s environmental agency likely has its own monitoring network. In Utah, the Utah Division of Air Quality at deq.utah.gov/air-quality provides information specific to local conditions, including Great Salt Lake dust data.

The EPA’s outdoor air quality data portal at epa.gov/outdoor-air-quality-data lets you search historical air quality records by location, helping you understand patterns in your area over time.

If you live near a large body of water, a dry lakebed, or a region with heavy agricultural dust, it’s worth checking whether your state has specific monitoring programs. Many states post air quality data through their departments of environmental quality or environmental protection.

The Bigger Picture

The Great Salt Lake’s water level tells a story that goes beyond recreation or scenery. At its current trajectory, scientists at Brigham Young University have warned that without significant policy intervention, the lake could continue to shrink to the point where dust becomes a near-constant threat rather than a seasonal one. Researchers project that PM2.5 dust exposure levels in communities along the Wasatch Front could climb from around 24 micrograms per cubic meter to 32 micrograms per cubic meter if the lake continues to fall.

A 2026 study examining dust control options concluded that the most cost-effective long-term solution is restoring the lake’s water levels. In the short term, the study identified 12 potential dust control approaches, ranging from shallow flooding of exposed areas to gravel cover and engineered surface treatments. The study stressed that expanded monitoring must come first so that policymakers have the data needed to trigger interventions before federal air quality mandates force their hand.

Restoring the lake is estimated to require about 800,000 additional acre-feet of water annually. Utah is currently exploring options, including purchasing water rights from agricultural users and studying the feasibility of diverting water from the Newfoundland Water Basin into the lake, which would be extremely expensive.

Utah State University: Utah State TODAY

How to Preserve Water During a Drought

Final Word

The air in Utah belongs to all of us, and what’s happening at the Great Salt Lake isn’t just an environmental story. It’s a family health story. The good news is that awareness is growing, monitoring is improving, and solutions are being studied seriously. In the meantime, checking AirNow.gov before a morning run, keeping N95 masks in the car during the spring dust season, and staying informed through the Utah Division of Air Quality are simple, effective ways to protect your household.

And if you’re outside the state, remember that your state may have its own version of this story. Look up your nearest large body of water, check whether its levels are declining, and explore your state’s air quality monitoring data. The information is publicly available and free to access. What you don’t know about what you’re breathing could matter more than you think. May God bless this world, Linda

Copyright Images: Pollution In Salt Lake City AdobeStock_5567, Smog in the Valley Below Mt. Timpanogos UtahAdobeStock_247860706 By Patrick

Sources and Further Reading: Utah Division of Air Quality: deq.utah.gov/air-quality/great-salt-lake-dust Utah Division of Water Resources: water.utah.gov EPA AirNow: airnow.gov University of Utah College of Pharmacy Research on GSL Dust: pharmacy.utah.edu Grow the Flow Utah: growtheflowutah.org U.S. Geological Survey Great Salt Lake: usgs.gov/centers/utah-water-science-center

The post State Of Utah: What Are We Breathing? appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Depression Era Chocolate Cake: The Recipe That Fed Families When Nothing Else Could

In the 1930s, American families were baking chocolate cake with no eggs, no butter, and no milk. Not because they preferred it that way. Because they had nothing else. The Great Depression forced a generation of home cooks to become chemists. When the standard ingredients for baking disappeared from the household budget, women across the […]

The post Depression Era Chocolate Cake: The Recipe That Fed Families When Nothing Else Could appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



from Ask a Prepper https://ift.tt/X73xfYF

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

What the “Prepping Experts” are Hiding from You

There is no shortage of prepping advice on the internet. You can find lists of what to stockpile, reviews of every piece of survival gear on the market, and endless debates about which knife or water filter is the best.  All of that has its place. But if you’ve been in the prepping world for […]

The post What the “Prepping Experts” are Hiding from You appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



from Ask a Prepper https://ift.tt/NEmCihp

How to Build a Stealth Fire Pit That Won’t Draw Attention

Estimated reading time: 13 minutes

How to Build a Stealth Fire Pit That Won't Draw Attention

It’s a Fire in a Hole with an Air Vent on the Side.

There’s a stealth fire building concept sometimes known as the Dakota Fire Pit. It’s a campfire design that burns surprisingly hot and, because it’s built inside a hole, doesn't broadcast a flame that would be visible for miles.

It requires a bit of engineering including a second vent hole located upwind and dug at an angle down towards the base of the main fire hole. Check out the diagram below to see what I mean.

Want to save this post for later? Click Here to Pin It On Pinterest!

Stealth Fire Pit Diagram

It’s An Old Idea

The idea of the Dakota Fire pit was to build a fire for cooking or warmth that would not be visible to others. Pioneers crossing the plains often didn’t want to attract attention and one story attributes the name to homesteaders and army scouts trying to avoid the attention of hostile tribes in the late 1800s across the Dakotas.

Dakota Fire Pit With Flames

It’s the Rocket Stove Concept in the Ground

A Rocket Stove is designed to draw air with a lower vent in the stove. The airflow caused by the heat from the fire draws air into the vent to feed and continuously fuel the fire. A stealth fire pit operates on the same principle except the air vent is dug in the ground.

Holes for Underground Rocket Stove

Finding a Location

There are a lot of opinions on the best location for a stealth fire. It goes without saying that the location should be obscured by its surroundings. It also makes sense to avoid the top of hills or ridges. But then there are conflicting opinions on the exact location.

Morning in the Woods

Some advise that it be built next to a tree with small trees and leaves directly above to diffuse the smoke. That may not be the best idea.

A fire built in a hole effectively blocks the light of the fire from being seen at a distance but the light of the fire will illuminate anything above or directly next to it, and smoke will do what it wants to do regardless of some leaves on a tree.

Other opinions recommend relatively open ground in an obscured area to avoid illuminating surrounding trees, cliffs, or large boulders.

Fire Pit In The Dark

Don’t light up the night.

Given the range of opinions, it seems best to build the fire pit in an area that’s hard to see at a distance without nearby tall natural structures that can be illuminated by the fire below.

Building a Stealth Fire Pit

Dakota Fire Pit Holes Labeled

You’re going to be digging two holes. One hole about a foot in circumference and the second smaller hole about a foot away from the first hole measuring about 4-inches in circumference dug at an angle to the base of the fire pit bottom.

Cut your fire hole first by using your shovel to define a circle about a foot in diameter. Try to loosen the soil and sod in one piece and set it aside.

Sod Next To Fire Pit Holes

Save the sod.

After you extinguish your fire and fill the hole with soil, you can replace the sod circle over the fire hole and scatter some debris so you don’t leave any signs of your fire or your presence in the location.

Digging Straight Down

Dig straight down.

The primary fire hole should be dug straight down at least a foot deep. A shovel is best, but a sharpened digging stick will work in a pinch. In fact, you’ll probably need a digging stick to dig the air vent on an angle to the fire pit. Get ready to use your hands for some digging as well.

Soils Challenges

Digging the primary fire hole is fairly straight forward and your only challenge may be the occasional root or rock. If the soil is just too flinty or riddled with roots, move on and find another spot.

Hole Dug In Soil

The biggest challenge is digging the fire vent. It should be dug upwind from the primary hole, but digging an angle to the base is the hard part. Be patient and work a little at a time while estimating how your angle can meet the base of the main fire hole.

Sandy soil can be the biggest challenge and if your vent hole collapses, you can bridge the gap with sticks and stones and cover it with soil. Clay has the most structural integrity but if you’ve ever dug through clay, you’ll probably wish it was sand.

Advanced Vent Work

Your vent hole is what will keep your fire going. Hopefully, the air finds its way down there. Any wind will help and the heat from the fire will draw some air from the vent, but you can do a few simple things to make the vent more efficient.

Capturing the wind.

  • Dig a shallow sloping trench pointing upwind a bit downward and outward from the vent hole rim.
  • Mound some soil up between the vent hole and the fire pit to serve as a wind stop to catch a bit of breeze and force it downward.
  • And make sure you dig your vent upwind of the prevailing wind if you can.

You don’t have to overdo it, but it all helps a little.

Building the Fire

Materials for Building Fire

Starting a fire in a steeply dug hole is a little different than conventional fires. The problem is lighting tinder at the base of a fire built and stacked in a hole. Here are some ideas about how to make that easier.         

1. Build A Tinder Nest

This is as simple as coiling some dry grasses or weeds to make a small nest and adding your tinder to the center. You should have some kindling stacked next to you while you hold the nest and light it and then drop it down into the empty hole.

As the tinder burns, drop kindling on top to keep the fire going. A piece of bark also works to hold and deliver your tinder to the bottom.

2. Line The Bottom Of The Pit With Tinder

Because you're dropping your kindling into the fire pit, you want to get your fire off to a good start. Lining the bottom of the pit with tinder will give your tinder nest added fuel. This will make it easier to get the kindling burning and get your fire pit lit.

3. Use Dry, Dead Wood

Smoke at night is less of an issue but you really don’t want a smoky fire. Avoid green branches or dead branches that have been lying on the ground and have become saturated with moisture. Once your tinder is burning, drop your kindling into the pit and you should be good to go.

4. Keep It Small

Fire in Dakota Fire Pit

The idea of a stealth fire is to keep a low profile. The fire you build should keep a low profile as well. As the coals burn down any wood you add will quickly ignite due to the convection from the vent. Don’t make it big enough for the flames to lick and leap over the edge of the pit.

Fire Pit Fail
Fire pit fail as flames emerge

If you’re trying to avoid attracting attention, that’s a sure giveaway.

Speaking of Smoke…

Smoke in the Woods

Firelight is what betrays a location at night. Smoke is the giveaway during the day. If stealth if your goal, smoke is your enemy during daylight hours.

The best time for a Stealth Pit fire is when it's windy. It will not only fuel your air vent nicely but will dissipate any smoke your fire produces. Traditional campfires fail in the wind.

Windy Day Fail
Traditional fires fail in the wind

The heat is blown horizontally away from the fire making it difficult to cook and providing little warmth on a cold day. The fire also tends to burn out quickly.

Fire Pit In Action

A stealthy, pit fire doesn’t have that problem. The walls of the hole concentrate the heat, channeling it straight up and making short work of boiling water in a pot over the pit or taking the edge off of cold hands and feet. It also protects the fire from rapid burnout in blustery winds.

Finally, it presents less of a fire hazard especially in early spring and late fall when the surrounding vegetation tends to be dead and dry. If you’re trying to keep a low profile with a fire, starting a forest fire is highly counter-productive on many levels.

After the Fire

Cooking Over The Pit

A fire in a hole is a good idea if you don’t want to be seen. Leaving the hole behind is a good clue that someone was in the vicinity.

When it’s time to move on, fill the hole and replace the piece of sod you dug out. Gather some brush and other detritus and spread it around on the ground around the area of the fire. You want to make it look like you found it -undisturbed and not traveled.

It’s a Good Fire Option for Any Reason

Cooking Over The Fire Pit

A deep, pit fire is a great option for cooking, warmth, and windy days in addition to being hard to see from a distance. It’s also a smart idea if an area has any risk for a forest fire. Then again, any fire can cause that to happen so be careful out there.

Hopefully, the only reason you ever build a Dakota Pit fire is to boil some sweet corn or tame a high wind. But it’s always good to know and understand the concept… just in case.

Like this post? Don't Forget to Pin It On Pinterest!

Originally published on Urban Survival Site.

You May Also Like:

The post How to Build a Stealth Fire Pit That Won’t Draw Attention appeared first on Homestead Survival Site.



from Homestead Survival Site https://ift.tt/vaS8npg

Top 5 Easy Wild Edibles to Forage This Summer for Beginners

Something shifts in the way you see the world when you start looking at plants as food rather than background noise. That patch of “weeds” along the trail edge, the low-growing leaves spreading across a sunny garden bed, the berry-covered brambles lining the fence at the edge of a park, they stop being scenery and ... Read more...

from Prepper's Will