In the White Mountains, smoke days can drag on. Many people first try to ride it out—resting, using rescue inhalers, running a purifier at home, or masking outdoors. When symptoms persist, return during the next smoky stretch, or worsen enough that you seek urgent care, the situation can quickly shift from “seasonal discomfort” to an injury claim.
A common pattern we see locally:
- Symptoms flare after morning and evening outdoor activities (hiking, sports, chores)
- Family members notice the same respiratory complaints around the same time
- A clinic documents exacerbation of asthma, bronchitis-like symptoms, or other smoke-related irritation
- Insurers later argue another cause—or that symptoms were unrelated to the smoke event
Your case needs a timeline that’s consistent and medical records that match the way symptoms behaved.


