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Monkshood

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YvonneM | 00:39 Thu 13th Jul 2006 | Home & Garden
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I was helping at school today and the teacher had been given a bouquet of flowers by one of her parents and there sitting in the middle was a spray of Monkshood I am positive that is what it was. As anyone else seen this for sale in a florist cos I am sure it is poisonous
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Yeah ...it's pretty nasty stuff ... you sure it's Monkshood?
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yes one of the children found a picture on the internet
At risk of sounding dim (which I do often and very well!) as long as she doesn't eat it she'll be safe- right?
I don't know what quantities are safe ...I just read that hunters used its sap to poison spears & arrowheads, so I don't think you need to ingest it.

If your kids are old enough to know not to touch it, then leave it ....otherwise, I'd bin it.
The flowers may well have been Acontium of which there are many garden forms of monkshood and hybrids.
All parts of the plant are poisonous.
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Thanks everyone putting this flower in any bouquet I think is a bit dangerous I am now going to check any florist shop I pass and find out more.
We are surrounded by poisonous plants.

There's a whole list here:
http://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profiles0606/Take CareBeAware.pdf

Aconitum is particularly poisonous but so is laburnum , yew, foxgloves of course and many others. Rhubard leaves are full of Oxalates which are poisonous.

I have monks hood in the garden, the children know it's poisonous it's not a problem.

Monkshood seems to have gathered a bit of a mystique about it - I wonder if it's been exagerated in TV dramas - I've heard people claim you can be poisoned by touching it but the RHS just class it as irritant to the skin - personally I've never found it as such maybe in higher exposure.

I think the last person I heard die of from accidental self-poisoning was some years ago when an older man with liver disease mistook wild narcissus bulbs for wild garlic.

It's a matter of keeping things in perspective. There's a nice little article on posonous plants on the BBC web page here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/conditions/poisono usplants1.shtml


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