Did you breathe much of that south wind the other day? You have to be careful of those south winds in this area. We are on the major route back to the air factory in eastern Montana for rejected air from Texas and most of the south back to the Eastern Montana Air Factory for refurbishing. We can only hope that the rejected air is not too toxic, as the Committee never releases information on their air shipments. The hard north winds, through here occasionally, are rush orders to replace the rejected air. They sometimes ship the new air cold and allow it take warm up on the way. The Committee has the Montana Air Factory hidden under one of those rock outcroppings so common throughout remote pastures in eastern Montana, thus making it harder to find and vandalize.
I understand there is also an Air Factory in the Smoky Mountains along the East Coast. They have a huge problem cleansing the air from those huge urban areas, and the smoky air is the residual left over from cleaning up that horrid smog.
The Northern Arizona Air Factory in the Arizona Strip, north of the Grand Canyon specializes in hot dry air for the deserts. If they shipped the more moist air from Montana or the wetter air from the Smokies into the desert, it would create an environmental emergency of unprecedented proportions.
Edgar Rice Burroughs, in his chronicles on Mars, documents that on Mars, their Air Factory is near Mar’s South Pole, protected by the Great White Apes. Burrough’s field technician, John Carter, spent quite some time at The Martian Air Factory, rescuing its supervisor and helping with essential repairs.