My brother got me to eat some leafs off of one of my moms house plants when I was 4. My tongue swelled, closing up my airway. Luckily we lived about 5 minutes drive time to the hospital. Needless too say, I never trusted my brother from there on out.
Ah yes. Give a man a plant leaf salad, feed him for a day. Give a man a *poison* plant leaf salad, feed him for a lifetime. 🌿🤔😐 So really we should all grow poison plants....right? Right!?
"I don't know how people eat this stuff. It's leaves all the way down." "give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. but teach a man to feed a fish and round and round we go." Quotes from Hank from Corner Gas.
A while back my daughter and her kids visited us and my daughter realized that my granddaughter's pupils are differently dilated. She immediately phoned her doctor to find out what it could be. In the meantime, kids being kids, my grandchild went on with her life. After a while she came in with a flower she picked at home and I immediately identified it as an Angel's Trumpet. Whether she ingested the poison through her skin or maybe licked her fingers, that was identified as the culprit.
She licked her fingers. I guarantee it. Kids get all sorts of things on their hands and of course fail to wash them, and those fingers invariably end up in their mouths. You are just lucky she wasn't picking oleanders! Extremely "sappy" when picked and extremely toxic when ingested. BTW, "angel trumpets" are the big dangling-down flowers from a tree-like plant, and "devil's trumpets" are the ones that grow on plants lower to the ground, with the flowers pointing upwards. They belong to the same family, and are also considered "the world's most hallucinogenic plant".
Ya’ can’t leave kids outta’ sight , huh? I’m glad the little girl is ok. I found this video very valuable. I must run it again , as the presenter spoke rapidly, although his enunciation was excellent and able to understand each word .
I think we grew 3 of these poisonous flowers in our gardens when I was a kid. I didn't know they were poisonous and I never had any interest in eating them. The only flowers I wanted to eat as a kid were roses. So I guess I have good instincts.
I have a health condition that means my heart beats WAY too fast, because my blood vessels don't constrict properly when I stand up... so having something that slowed my heart rate but also made it beat more strongly would be good for me. xD SO BROKEN I'M BACKWARDS. Feed me poison and I get all better, lol. xD (I'm kidding. Don't feed me poison. I don't want those other side effects...)) Also if you guys did a show about POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome) I would love it. So many people don't understand it and I'd love to be able to point them at a scientific video to explain it all.
Iirc oleandrin was used in traditional medicine for things like heart problems. Also according to certain prominent political figure from the US who has ties with oleandrin manufacturers it’s very good for treating covid.
Plants are amazing. I did not know a lot of these common household plants were so highly toxic. Great video, and clear explanation on what each toxin does.
Here in Nepal, RHODODENDRON is the national flower and considered medicine too. So we actually eat the rhododendron flowers. I myself have eaten many of them during their flowering season and was completely fine. 🙃
Oleanders are one of my favorite flowers of all time. Not only are they very beautiful but honestly what drew me to them was the fact that every part of the plant is poisonous.
LOL, I too am fascinated by poisonous plants and have a small collection. If it's poisonous, I want it in my garden! Have you seen the famous English Poison Garden?
"Sago palm" is the name for two plants, unrelated to each other. Metroxylon sagu is a palm; Cycas revoluta is a cycad. The first people I read about who eat sago are the Sawi of lowland New Guinea, where Metroxylon grows.
I doubt it. Bees cover a huge area. Also like most factoids, it's only partially true. Only some rhododendrons cause this. healthywithhoney.com/what-is-mad-honey-is-it-dangerous-where-can-i-find-it/ However, it would be a good idea to be cautious.
Rhododendrons are pretty common plants around houses in Japan, known as Tsutsuji (ツツジ). I used to suck their honey picking flowers from the bushes in front of my house in my younger days. Some of them have poisons, while others don't, I hear. But be careful anyway.
@@atsukorichards1675 mmm... Then I think these plants have a really big area to live. I am from chennai, south India. And I see a lot, I mean a lot of rhododendron every where.
@@cutebutsadisticable The story I heard was that Loki fashioned some mistletoe into a spear and got Baldur's blind brother, Hödr, to throw the spear at Baldur after everything in existence swore they would not hurt Baldur (Except for mistletoe because the gods thought it was to young and innocent to be asked) thus making Baldur almost indestructible. Because Hödr was blind he couldn't tell what he was holding was more than just a spear. Based off of this, I believe it was Loki who killed Baldur.
Greetings. Great video. Greek guy here 😊. Dolmades are made from grape leaves. It is a traditional constantinopolian dish coming from the Greeks that lived there. I have never heard about cyclamin leaves in this dish, all Greeks use grape leaves, and I assure you it tastes amazing!
And I concur they taste amazing. Sadly I am not Greek and can find nowhere to get fresh made (or find grape leaves to make my own) I always have at least 1 tin of dolmades in my cupboard at all times.
Hydrangeas tell you the acidity of your soil too :) they grow more purple and pink depending upon the content of their soil (no I don’t know which is which, look it up yourself or something ;) ) some people use this to their advantage and use different types of fertiliser/food to create shrubs that have different shades of flowers. It’s a wonderful effect!!
The ASPCA has a list of toxic and non-toxic plants that are commonly encountered. They break it down by cat, dog, and horse. Though there's probably a list of human safe house plants somewhere out there.
I now have to keep most of my small succulents away from my kitties after one of them got mysteriously sick one day - I noticed a bunch of bite marks on a small jade plant and mystery solved...
Pigs Face is another. It's a small succulent plant with pretty pink flowers. However if you get the sap on you, you will swell up and develop the typical "Pigs Face" of the plant. It takes about a week to get over exposure to this. I was given it as a gift by a friend. Thanks.
2 years ago our dog died from Sago Palm poisoning. It is extremely toxic with no cure. It takes actually very little consumption of the plant to be dead within 24 to 48 hours. Even with medication to strengthen the liver from the vet he passed 2 and a half months later.
Thank you. The Number 7 Sago Palm show is being confused with another variety. blogs.ifas.ufl.edu/nassauco/2017/06/10/fact-sheet-sago-palm-2/ Most sago is commercially extracted from a type of palm, Metroxylon sagu, which is sometimes called “true sago palm” to distinguish it from this cycad species.
Any mention of dumbcane, aka _Dieffenbachia_ should also mention all of its Araceae/aroid siblings, too! Aglaonema (Chinese evergreen), Philodendron, Pothos, Epipremnum, Homalomena, Caladium, Alocasia, Colocasia (taro root plants), Anthurium, Spathiphyllum (peace lily), Zantedeschia (calla “lily”), and many more very popular plants. All can cause dumbcane sort of reactions. Just try eating undercooked taro leaf. I have! Not fun! Like swallowing sand all day long! The taro root is good when cooked and then it’s like a potato. Called _arbi_ in Hindi, as a vegetable. But what’s even more toxic, and that I see people promoting on YT as “pet-friendly”? Hoyas… they’re in the milkweed family, aka the dog-banes, aka the Apocynaceae family. Right there with Oleander, Huernia, Orbea, & Stapelia, Jasmine, Mandevilla, trumpet vines, ceropegias-popular string of hearts! And the Dischidias. Also Vinca vines.. and don’t forget, popular in Hawaii & many other warm climates: Plumeria. Very common but known to be filled w very noxious sap. Stephanotis. Similar to Hoya but hardier. Lovely beautiful vine, for outdoors. Smells great too when blooming.. Pachypodium, the spiky palm tree (or Madagascar palm), is also pretty popular as a succulent. As well as its Middle Eastern relative, the Adenium or desert rose plant. Literally it’s such a massive family, the milkweeds! Just wash your hands and don’t touch your face or mouth! Or anything sensitive. Lol
You guys forgot about Hemlock. It grows natively here in North America, I used to have a ton of these things growing around my country home in Ohio as a child. Had no idea the tiny white flowers were almost a guaranteed death if eaten.
I realize this is 4yrs old. 1 extremely important common plant isn't on the list that should have made the top of this list and that is Lillies. Lillies like Tiger Lily & Easter Lily ( True Lilies) A bite of a lily flower or leaf is enough to kill a toddler or pet. Even the pollen on these can kill your pets. If a cat brushes up on the pollen and they lick themselves they will die. I also think when he spoke about Oleander he should have included Azales & Plumeria. They are all in the same family & are quite toxic. Another thing that should have been mentioned when he spoke about Cycads. Sago Palms ( a Cycad not a palm) & certain other Cycads which are frequently imported from Asia are much more toxic than he mentioned and gardeners I know wear gloves when working with them & all people should definitely wash their hands if handling them. They are the #1 most illegally poached plant and many of the more poisonous ones are imported all over the world. Just realize most houseplants are toxic to some degree. Even some Hoya are toxic as well as Dischidia. Also Ivy is poisonous and the sap is extremely irritating and frequently causes welts and swelling. Just my 2 cents but there are many more people collecting plants and the list of toxic - mildly poisonous is huge. So i recommend looking up each plant you purchase and figure out what comfort level you have owning it with children and/or pets. Take care.
Young Daffodil leaves are easy to mistake with young garlic leaves (if you're stubborn to not wear glasses like my dad).Young garlic leaves have a mild garlic taste, and we eat them in spring. And the fact that garlic is being left to grow wildly in the back of the yard along with daffodil, also did not help.. The taste of Daffodil leaves is a just a bit bitter, with no trace of garlic, that I was so looking forward to (first time in a few years I managed to get to my parents in sprint).. When I asked my parents why it did not have a garlic taste, that's when the bulb lit up... I got just a bite and was ok. My mom got away with a few runs to the bathroom. My dad did not even have a bite...
Yews are very common landscaping plants in cooler climates and every part is extremely poisonous, aside from the flesh of the distinctive berry (which doesn't taste too bad, actually)
I find the flesh of the aril is just very, very sweet and doesn't really taste of much. I have read that you can make a jelly from them, but separating the poisonous seeds from the edible flesh is far too fiddly, and very messy.
I think this isn't the first time dieffenbachia has been mentioned. It's a great example because of its common name, but it's worth noting (and apologies if it's brought up later in the video I'm commenting right after #1 finished because pedantic comments can't wait) the calcium crystals in question exist in a huge number of common house and garden plants, such as pothos and most ornamental varieties of elephant ears.
A fun side note, I once absentmindedly took a bite out of an elephant ear stalk that was in one hand instead of the carrot in the other and wound up standing over the sink drooling uncontrollably and mumbling to poison control. It's pretty hard to eat enough of those crystals to do damage if you're an adult human, because it's pretty immediately apparent it's a bad idea, and it stays apparent for hours.
The moment Stefan said "Don't eat the houseplants" I started singing that sentence to the tune of Don't Eat the Daisies. That's gonna be stuck in my head for a while...
No mention of Foxglove/Digitalis? My middle school summer camp was crawling with it, and the first order of business on the first day of camp every year was to explain to every one not to touch any of it. It's also what James Bond was poisoned with in Casino Royale.
I wonder why it seems like so many people know about poison in poinsettias but not a lot of these more common plants. My mom definitely scared me away from touching poinsettia, I thought if I touched it and touched my mouth I'd drop dead lol.
The most dangerous part of the sago palm is their sawband-sharp fronds. We had one in my backyard growing up in the SC lowcountry, and ill never forget the sensation of them rubbing against skin 😬 shockingly sharp, always be careful around them with children
To be fair a lot of common houseplants have a high amt of calcium oxalate like the diffenbachia: monstera deliciosa, philodendron, pothos, rhaphidophora tetrasperma, etc. A lot of common houseplants in general are mildly toxic to consume
I didn't catch the harmful use of cannabis? Could you make a video about that? And if that isn't of interest, I'd love to learn some of the concerns and harmful effects. Please and thanks. And what an a amazing, unique garden. Absolutely a stop I plan to make the next time I'm in the UK 🇬🇧
I have all these; minus oleander, and more...Foxgloves, monkshood/wolfsbane, lupines, nicotania, azaleas(almost a rhododendron), wild nightshade and potatoes plants, trillium, and the list goes on...
Wow! Wish you guys had released this a couple months ago. Might've saved me one trip to the woods and one "hunting accident" allegedly involving my no good, two-timing wife!
In Spain and Portugal if you have to sleep outdoors then under oleander is a good place as insects stay away from it. Also if anyone bothers you they get painful skin.
My mom loves "weeping figs" or also called "benjamin figs" they are also slightly poisonous. We now have 4 of them. One is already 2 meters tall and across. It already hit the sealing over a decade ago and now only gets wider. It can't survive the harsh winters in Germany so it has to be kept indoors. Okay it would be impossible to get it outside anyway it just doesn't fit though the door. The others 3 are roughly 1.8m, 1.2m and 0.8m tall.
Poinsettia isn't so much poisonous as toxic/caustic. Get the milky white sap in the stems on a broken area of your skin,or let it come in contact with your mucus membrane (eyes,mouth, inside your nose) and that area will become red,painful, swollen,inflamed and maybe blistered. The injuries it causes resemble a bacterial infection or possibly even a burn, and are highly unpleasant to have to go through.
We use to have yew berry bushes growing around my area when I was young. Thank god I never ate one of them and as to why people even plant those in the first place is beyond me.
@@hishamsadiq4104 NO NO NO NO NO. *_Every_* part of a yew plant is poisonous, except the red fleshy part of the aril (the thing that looks like the fruit). The seed contained within the aril is poisonous, but the red flesh is very, very sweet and a good source of Vitamin C. Eating just a few yew seeds or leaves can be fatal. People have even died from breathing the smoke from burning yew wood, or from inhaling sawdust when cutting down a yew tree while not wearing a protective mask.
My cousin's friend decorated her bridal shower cake with lilies of the valley, stuck into the frosting like a giant toxic bouquet. I saw the cake on the table and called the friend aside saying that you can't serve that, the garnish is poison, but the friend served it anyway, saying it was too pretty to pick the flowers out. I offered to go to the florist and buy some orange blossoms, but she was determined. I made no friends when I told my cousin and mother not to eat it because the plants were poisonous but I felt that I had to. To be honest, there probably wasn't enough contact exposure to make anyone sick, but I'd heard stories about digitalis and didn't want it on my conscience. There were a few other guests looking uncomfortable and not eating the cake, so I wasn't the only one who noticed. Thankfully, nobody got sick from it.
My family's dog nearly died because she ate a cycad bulb that was growing in a sack of potting mix. Apparently cycads smell and taste extremely sweet, making them alluring to pets and a source of potential heartbreak for anybody who owns one...
What I find interesting is that deer will consume hydrangeas down to the stem .. they usually instinctively leave toxic plants alone..ie..oleander,daffodils ect…
10:15 to 10:25 is not correct, for at least one of the plants. Oleander can kill, even in small amounts. Livestock that even eat a few bites can die before getting far away from the bush. And even using a stick of it to roast food over a fire (or burning it as yard waste) can be really bad for human health.
😳once my mother cut a dieffenbachia and none of us knew it was poisonous. I was helping her and took the cut edge with my bare hand. I even spread the juice on my fingers - I felt nice. but very soon my hands started burning and itching all the way to the bone. i was crying in pain for an hour not being able to wash it off. This was the way i learned that bastard is poisonous 😅
My brother got me to eat some leafs off of one of my moms house plants when I was 4. My tongue swelled, closing up my airway. Luckily we lived about 5 minutes drive time to the hospital.
Needless too say, I never trusted my brother from there on out.
Neither would I...
That’s a universal rule…
Wow that is so scary and sad I'm sorry. You are better off learning who to trust as early as possible. So glad you survived!
He probs didnt know
The most common house plants are plastic. Don't eat those either.
And they are far worse because they can cause hearth disease, cancers, testosterone disfonction, etc.
Oh wait... And they are everywhere!
seashell1286 thanks for the smile
😝😛😝😍😝😛😀😃😄
You're not the boss of me! I'll eat as much plastic as I want!
Wait. Your not actually supposed to eat those!? 😬
This is great information! Thanks. I feel like I just graduated from a Poison Ivy League school.
Tehehehe
I both like and dislike you.
Badump Tsss.
Yes. I'm going to use this information to poison my hot mom n breed her
Ah yes. Give a man a plant leaf salad, feed him for a day. Give a man a *poison* plant leaf salad, feed him for a lifetime. 🌿🤔😐
So really we should all grow poison plants....right? Right!?
Aspect Science 🤣
Oh my goodness no 😂😂😂
Takiyah Walker oh my goodness yes!
Aspect Science - **facephone* 😆
"I don't know how people eat this stuff. It's leaves all the way down."
"give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. but teach a man to feed a fish and round and round we go."
Quotes from Hank from Corner Gas.
Kudos for the Kurzgesagt shirt.
I was gonna comment the same thing :D
"Never eat mystery road honey" is one of my new favorite quotes
Truly a modern-day Socrates
Yes. Also, wanna start a band? My name idea is Mad Honey :P
oh yeah, I grow these in my garden to eat so my digestive system and immune system get a nice workout trying to expel poisons
Yep that’s how science works
Muscle Hank
Congrats!
Muscle Hank I like to build up my immunity to iocane powder.
Carson Rush Inconceivable!
Muscle Hank will you be my real dad
“Moral of the story is: Never eat mysterious road honey” XD XD
The road honey is actually pretty choice
Land of milk n honey
@@meghanachauhan9380 wut do u mean
"mystery road honey" would be a good name for a band
@@RobertP.Trebor yeah I've gotten it and it was great
A video about very toxic plants that look like food would be interesting.
so you eat them with water
Aconite should be in said video.
👀
A while back my daughter and her kids visited us and my daughter realized that my granddaughter's pupils are differently dilated. She immediately phoned her doctor to find out what it could be. In the meantime, kids being kids, my grandchild went on with her life. After a while she came in with a flower she picked at home and I immediately identified it as an Angel's Trumpet.
Whether she ingested the poison through her skin or maybe licked her fingers, that was identified as the culprit.
She licked her fingers. I guarantee it. Kids get all sorts of things on their hands and of course fail to wash them, and those fingers invariably end up in their mouths. You are just lucky she wasn't picking oleanders! Extremely "sappy" when picked and extremely toxic when ingested. BTW, "angel trumpets" are the big dangling-down flowers from a tree-like plant, and "devil's trumpets" are the ones that grow on plants lower to the ground, with the flowers pointing upwards. They belong to the same family, and are also considered "the world's most hallucinogenic plant".
Ya’ can’t leave kids outta’ sight , huh? I’m glad the little girl is ok. I found this video very valuable. I must run it again , as the presenter spoke rapidly, although his enunciation was excellent and able to understand each word .
I think we grew 3 of these poisonous flowers in our gardens when I was a kid. I didn't know they were poisonous and I never had any interest in eating them. The only flowers I wanted to eat as a kid were roses. So I guess I have good instincts.
I have a health condition that means my heart beats WAY too fast, because my blood vessels don't constrict properly when I stand up... so having something that slowed my heart rate but also made it beat more strongly would be good for me. xD
SO BROKEN I'M BACKWARDS. Feed me poison and I get all better, lol. xD
(I'm kidding. Don't feed me poison. I don't want those other side effects...))
Also if you guys did a show about POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome) I would love it. So many people don't understand it and I'd love to be able to point them at a scientific video to explain it all.
Iirc oleandrin was used in traditional medicine for things like heart problems. Also according to certain prominent political figure from the US who has ties with oleandrin manufacturers it’s very good for treating covid.
I love Lilly of the valley! They are my favorite flowers! I grew up with them and loved to smell them thank goodness I never thought to eat any o.o
Plants are amazing. I did not know a lot of these common household plants were so highly toxic. Great video, and clear explanation on what each toxin does.
SciShow + kurzgesagt. This is how we know its real
Hoping they team up at some point
Here in Nepal, RHODODENDRON is the national flower and considered medicine too. So we actually eat the rhododendron flowers. I myself have eaten many of them during their flowering season and was completely fine. 🙃
Oh yeah, isn’t there that trippy Himalayan honey made by the bees that pollinate rhododendrons?? I was reading about this.
In Himachal (India) we too drink rhododendron juice and its also our state flower
@@jhguyfyt9769 🤔maybe if you are exposed to in incrementally for a long time - you grow tolerance to the substance
Oleanders are one of my favorite flowers of all time. Not only are they very beautiful but honestly what drew me to them was the fact that every part of the plant is poisonous.
The poison is what drew you to the plant?
LOL, I too am fascinated by poisonous plants and have a small collection. If it's poisonous, I want it in my garden! Have you seen the famous English Poison Garden?
Gave me shivers@@BabalonNuit
"Mistletoe can be deadly if you eat it."
"But a kiss can be even deadlier if you mean it."
"Sago palm" is the name for two plants, unrelated to each other. Metroxylon sagu is a palm; Cycas revoluta is a cycad. The first people I read about who eat sago are the Sawi of lowland New Guinea, where Metroxylon grows.
Wait so. My dad just bought bees to make our own honey and our yard is FULL of rhododendrons. AM I GOING TO DIE
Sydney Svoboda , probably.
Everybody does.
I doubt it. Bees cover a huge area.
Also like most factoids, it's only partially true. Only some rhododendrons cause this.
healthywithhoney.com/what-is-mad-honey-is-it-dangerous-where-can-i-find-it/
However, it would be a good idea to be cautious.
Check with your county agent or agricultural extension office.
Rhododendrons are pretty common plants around houses in Japan, known as Tsutsuji (ツツジ). I used to suck their honey picking flowers from the bushes in front of my house in my younger days. Some of them have poisons, while others don't, I hear. But be careful anyway.
@@atsukorichards1675 mmm... Then I think these plants have a really big area to live. I am from chennai, south India. And I see a lot, I mean a lot of rhododendron every where.
Mistletoe killed Baldur, so that's enough of a reason to avoid it.
z.browning all my scandinavians unite
But it was tricked by Loki. So was it Loki who killed Baldur or innocent Mistletoe?
@@cutebutsadisticable The story I heard was that Loki fashioned some mistletoe into a spear and got Baldur's blind brother, Hödr, to throw the spear at Baldur after everything in existence swore they would not hurt Baldur (Except for mistletoe because the gods thought it was to young and innocent to be asked) thus making Baldur almost indestructible. Because Hödr was blind he couldn't tell what he was holding was more than just a spear. Based off of this, I believe it was Loki who killed Baldur.
Mistletoe is actually a parasitic plant!
Greetings. Great video. Greek guy here 😊. Dolmades are made from grape leaves. It is a traditional constantinopolian dish coming from the Greeks that lived there. I have never heard about cyclamin leaves in this dish, all Greeks use grape leaves, and I assure you it tastes amazing!
And I concur they taste amazing.
Sadly I am not Greek and can find nowhere to get fresh made (or find grape leaves to make my own) I always have at least 1 tin of dolmades in my cupboard at all times.
@@fallensway855You can plant grapes in your garden, only for the leaves.
Hydrangeas tell you the acidity of your soil too :) they grow more purple and pink depending upon the content of their soil (no I don’t know which is which, look it up yourself or something ;) ) some people use this to their advantage and use different types of fertiliser/food to create shrubs that have different shades of flowers. It’s a wonderful effect!!
Burying a copper coin under your hydrangea will have them bloom intense blue. I did that to a pink one 40 years ago and it still blooms blue.
The ASPCA has a list of toxic and non-toxic plants that are commonly encountered. They break it down by cat, dog, and horse. Though there's probably a list of human safe house plants somewhere out there.
Easter lilies are 100% toxic to cats, causing kidney failure.
I now have to keep most of my small succulents away from my kitties after one of them got mysteriously sick one day - I noticed a bunch of bite marks on a small jade plant and mystery solved...
Is the kitten ok though?
Dang Le oh yes! Arya is doing great! :)
Oh thank God, sorry if i seem weird, i just really care about other people's pets for some reason :D
Dang Le haha it’s okay!
It also helps to spray water with a drop of dish soap on the leaves. Kitties do not like the taste
Pigs Face is another. It's a small succulent plant with pretty pink flowers. However if you get the sap on you, you will swell up and develop the typical "Pigs Face" of the plant. It takes about a week to get over exposure to this. I was given it as a gift by a friend. Thanks.
Perfect, now I know what to use in my salad
Perfect! I could use these in my next robbery.
Hustle Hank hah
Lol. Just don't come to my house robbing please. You will be severely dissapointed cuz there's nothing left to burgle lol
Lol
2 years ago our dog died from Sago Palm poisoning. It is extremely toxic with no cure. It takes actually very little consumption of the plant to be dead within 24 to 48 hours. Even with medication to strengthen the liver from the vet he passed 2 and a half months later.
Ryan Mueller Our dog ate one tiny piece and instantly shut down.. took a full day of surgery for her to barely make it out
Thank you. The Number 7 Sago Palm show is being confused with another variety.
blogs.ifas.ufl.edu/nassauco/2017/06/10/fact-sheet-sago-palm-2/
Most sago is commercially extracted from a type of palm, Metroxylon sagu, which is sometimes called “true sago palm” to distinguish it from this cycad species.
Oh no. That's so sad to hear. I think I would have to get rid of a lot of house plants I have if I got a cat or dog.
Any mention of dumbcane, aka _Dieffenbachia_ should also mention all of its Araceae/aroid siblings, too! Aglaonema (Chinese evergreen), Philodendron, Pothos, Epipremnum, Homalomena, Caladium, Alocasia, Colocasia (taro root plants), Anthurium, Spathiphyllum (peace lily), Zantedeschia (calla “lily”), and many more very popular plants. All can cause dumbcane sort of reactions. Just try eating undercooked taro leaf. I have! Not fun! Like swallowing sand all day long! The taro root is good when cooked and then it’s like a potato. Called _arbi_ in Hindi, as a vegetable.
But what’s even more toxic, and that I see people promoting on YT as “pet-friendly”? Hoyas… they’re in the milkweed family, aka the dog-banes, aka the Apocynaceae family. Right there with Oleander, Huernia, Orbea, & Stapelia, Jasmine, Mandevilla, trumpet vines, ceropegias-popular string of hearts! And the Dischidias. Also Vinca vines.. and don’t forget, popular in Hawaii & many other warm climates: Plumeria. Very common but known to be filled w very noxious sap. Stephanotis. Similar to Hoya but hardier. Lovely beautiful vine, for outdoors. Smells great too when blooming.. Pachypodium, the spiky palm tree (or Madagascar palm), is also pretty popular as a succulent. As well as its Middle Eastern relative, the Adenium or desert rose plant. Literally it’s such a massive family, the milkweeds! Just wash your hands and don’t touch your face or mouth! Or anything sensitive. Lol
And how could I forget the other popular aroids… Rhaphidophora, Monstera, Scindapsus & Syngonium! Dumbcanes all the same!
lily of the valley can also be confused for ramps, which are a kind of wild onion that grows in similar environments as these flowers
Yes - they're called ramsens/wild garlic in the UK and the leaves do look similar. Flowers are very different though.
Don't know how THAT could happen; the SMELL alone would give them away! Ramps smell like onions!
"Don't eat the house plants" oh thank you, thank you, this tip is eye opening! My life is forever changed, thank you! Words to live by! XD
I have them around me. They called "Neighbors"
Ibnu Sanggar Watasa Examples, please!
I know what I'll be -having- avoiding tonight
UA-cam comments section I hope
I'm going to start a religion focused on you
OMG I ENCOUNTERED U ORGANICALLY
Curtis Kimbro the religion will be called “Justin.Y-ism.”
Justin Y. You again?
This makes me see flowers in a completely different way
I used to sew ties to all the corners of to duvet and to the cover then tie together and shake it into position. Keeps it from slipping as well
Fun fact: Dumb meant 'silent', 'mute', or 'unable to speak' before it meant 'stupid'.
1:34 "Dumb being an antiquated, insulting term to refer to someone who can't speak."
I love this.
Other than the sago palm, my mother owned all these plants when I was growing up.
You guys forgot about Hemlock. It grows natively here in North America, I used to have a ton of these things growing around my country home in Ohio as a child.
Had no idea the tiny white flowers were almost a guaranteed death if eaten.
MAM, please stop damaging my DNA.
So kiss under the mistletoe aaand die from the poison..how romantic
“That girl is *poison”* -Bell Biv DeVoe
Elisa Abernathy great. Now all I see is Turk doing that dance.
LOVE the Kurzgesagt reference, how sportive of your channel to advertise eachother! Both are awesome btw!!
"Lily of the Valley, which you may know if you're a fan of..."
Me: Queen?
Host: Breaking Bad
I realize this is 4yrs old. 1 extremely important common plant isn't on the list that should have made the top of this list and that is Lillies. Lillies like Tiger Lily & Easter Lily ( True Lilies) A bite of a lily flower or leaf is enough to kill a toddler or pet. Even the pollen on these can kill your pets. If a cat brushes up on the pollen and they lick themselves they will die.
I also think when he spoke about Oleander he should have included Azales & Plumeria. They are all in the same family & are quite toxic. Another thing that should have been mentioned when he spoke about Cycads. Sago Palms ( a Cycad not a palm) & certain other Cycads which are frequently imported from Asia are much more toxic than he mentioned and gardeners I know wear gloves when working with them & all people should definitely wash their hands if handling them. They are the #1 most illegally poached plant and many of the more poisonous ones are imported all over the world. Just realize most houseplants are toxic to some degree. Even some Hoya are toxic as well as Dischidia. Also Ivy is poisonous and the sap is extremely irritating and frequently causes welts and swelling. Just my 2 cents but there are many more people collecting plants and the list of toxic - mildly poisonous is huge. So i recommend looking up each plant you purchase and figure out what comfort level you have owning it with children and/or pets. Take care.
Thank you for your informative videos. Kindly include pictures of the plants and flowers more often in the videos
And people don't understand my rule of "If I can't eat it I'm not planting it"....
..Please show more of the plants from roots to top. Thanks FYI
It seems Scishow reads the same Wikipedia articles that I do.
Aka 9 excuses for why you don't want to work on the garden
Young Daffodil leaves are easy to mistake with young garlic leaves (if you're stubborn to not wear glasses like my dad).Young garlic leaves have a mild garlic taste, and we eat them in spring. And the fact that garlic is being left to grow wildly in the back of the yard along with daffodil, also did not help..
The taste of Daffodil leaves is a just a bit bitter, with no trace of garlic, that I was so looking forward to (first time in a few years I managed to get to my parents in sprint).. When I asked my parents why it did not have a garlic taste, that's when the bulb lit up... I got just a bite and was ok. My mom got away with a few runs to the bathroom. My dad did not even have a bite...
Yews are very common landscaping plants in cooler climates and every part is extremely poisonous, aside from the flesh of the distinctive berry (which doesn't taste too bad, actually)
I find the flesh of the aril is just very, very sweet and doesn't really taste of much. I have read that you can make a jelly from them, but separating the poisonous seeds from the edible flesh is far too fiddly, and very messy.
I think this isn't the first time dieffenbachia has been mentioned. It's a great example because of its common name, but it's worth noting (and apologies if it's brought up later in the video I'm commenting right after #1 finished because pedantic comments can't wait) the calcium crystals in question exist in a huge number of common house and garden plants, such as pothos and most ornamental varieties of elephant ears.
A fun side note, I once absentmindedly took a bite out of an elephant ear stalk that was in one hand instead of the carrot in the other and wound up standing over the sink drooling uncontrollably and mumbling to poison control. It's pretty hard to eat enough of those crystals to do damage if you're an adult human, because it's pretty immediately apparent it's a bad idea, and it stays apparent for hours.
The moment Stefan said "Don't eat the houseplants" I started singing that sentence to the tune of Don't Eat the Daisies.
That's gonna be stuck in my head for a while...
I need more plant videos!💚🌱
Someone out there must’ve just look at their house plant and thought; “What would happen if I ate it...”
No mention of Foxglove/Digitalis? My middle school summer camp was crawling with it, and the first order of business on the first day of camp every year was to explain to every one not to touch any of it.
It's also what James Bond was poisoned with in Casino Royale.
Digoxin, the heart drug, is synthesized from foxglove.
I wonder why it seems like so many people know about poison in poinsettias but not a lot of these more common plants. My mom definitely scared me away from touching poinsettia, I thought if I touched it and touched my mouth I'd drop dead lol.
The most dangerous part of the sago palm is their sawband-sharp fronds. We had one in my backyard growing up in the SC lowcountry, and ill never forget the sensation of them rubbing against skin 😬 shockingly sharp, always be careful around them with children
Anyone picking wild garlic should be aware of lily of the valley, as young plants can look very similar and even grow within the same patch
ive deliberately got bittersweet nightshade and jimsonweed datura on my windowsill for the flowers.
To be fair a lot of common houseplants have a high amt of calcium oxalate like the diffenbachia: monstera deliciosa, philodendron, pothos, rhaphidophora tetrasperma, etc. A lot of common houseplants in general are mildly toxic to consume
Really enjoyed your presentation. Thank you
I had a headmaster who once ate a daffodil infront of a whole school assembly. What a role model.
Raw juniper can make you (and your pets) sick! Had no idea until my cat ate some needles from a bush, and couldn't eat for a few days.
how was the silver squill not featured in this episode?
I didn't catch the harmful use of cannabis? Could you make a video about that? And if that isn't of interest, I'd love to learn some of the concerns and harmful effects. Please and thanks. And what an a amazing, unique garden. Absolutely a stop I plan to make the next time I'm in the UK 🇬🇧
I have all these; minus oleander, and more...Foxgloves, monkshood/wolfsbane, lupines, nicotania, azaleas(almost a rhododendron), wild nightshade and potatoes plants, trillium, and the list goes on...
Wow! Wish you guys had released this a couple months ago. Might've saved me one trip to the woods and one "hunting accident" allegedly involving my no good, two-timing wife!
In Spain and Portugal if you have to sleep outdoors then under oleander is a good place as insects stay away from it. Also if anyone bothers you they get painful skin.
My mom loves "weeping figs" or also called "benjamin figs" they are also slightly poisonous. We now have 4 of them. One is already 2 meters tall and across. It already hit the sealing over a decade ago and now only gets wider. It can't survive the harsh winters in Germany so it has to be kept indoors. Okay it would be impossible to get it outside anyway it just doesn't fit though the door. The others 3 are roughly 1.8m, 1.2m and 0.8m tall.
I learnt about lily of the valley from a Nancy Drew Files book. Interesting list and great video!
I never thought about there being physical contaminants, rather than toxic poisonous compounds within the plants that is interesting 1:40
Hmmmmm I was told hydrangeas were good to keep our chickens worm free. Glad I hadn’t tried them yet!
Poinsettia isn't so much poisonous as toxic/caustic.
Get the milky white sap in the stems on a broken area of your skin,or let it come in contact with your mucus membrane (eyes,mouth, inside your nose) and that area will become red,painful, swollen,inflamed and maybe blistered.
The injuries it causes resemble a bacterial infection or possibly even a burn, and are highly unpleasant to have to go through.
All the plants with Euphorbia in their name are like that. As a rule, any plant with milky sap, you should avoid getting it on you.
We use to have yew berry bushes growing around my area when I was young. Thank god I never ate one of them and as to why people even plant those in the first place is beyond me.
Their only dangerous if you swallow the seeds
@@hishamsadiq4104 Pets and children still could eat it.
@@hishamsadiq4104
NO NO NO NO NO.
*_Every_* part of a yew plant is poisonous, except the red fleshy part of the aril (the thing that looks like the fruit). The seed contained within the aril is poisonous, but the red flesh is very, very sweet and a good source of Vitamin C.
Eating just a few yew seeds or leaves can be fatal. People have even died from breathing the smoke from burning yew wood, or from inhaling sawdust when cutting down a yew tree while not wearing a protective mask.
Thumbs up for using the correct term "initialism" at 9:01 instead of the misnomer: "acronym". 👍👍
9:54 It's obvious you've never had a dog.
My cousin's friend decorated her bridal shower cake with lilies of the valley, stuck into the frosting like a giant toxic bouquet. I saw the cake on the table and called the friend aside saying that you can't serve that, the garnish is poison, but the friend served it anyway, saying it was too pretty to pick the flowers out. I offered to go to the florist and buy some orange blossoms, but she was determined. I made no friends when I told my cousin and mother not to eat it because the plants were poisonous but I felt that I had to. To be honest, there probably wasn't enough contact exposure to make anyone sick, but I'd heard stories about digitalis and didn't want it on my conscience. There were a few other guests looking uncomfortable and not eating the cake, so I wasn't the only one who noticed. Thankfully, nobody got sick from it.
Nice Kurzgesagt shirt!
RIP... Yep that one wins the acronym of the year award
Time to make a literal garden salad for my family
My family's dog nearly died because she ate a cycad bulb that was growing in a sack of potting mix. Apparently cycads smell and taste extremely sweet, making them alluring to pets and a source of potential heartbreak for anybody who owns one...
What if i mix all of these plants toxic parts together? Would it help me travel to another dimension?
I own half of those plants right now and the other half, i have them while growing up. Didn’t even know I’m surrounded by toxin.
educational channel solidarity between scishow and kurzgesagt 👌🏽😩
Peppermint is always a good plant to have that's safe for most everyone
Lilly of the valley has cardiac glycozides aswell, which is pretty toxic
My brain almost bleeding sucking all this knowledge but learned a lot😆
scishow: don't eat the poisonous plants
me: maybe i should nibble on the hydrangea bush outside my front door
The biggest take away from this video is that scientists are very creative when it comes to naming poisons from flowers
*slurps road honey*
What I find interesting is that deer will consume hydrangeas down to the stem .. they usually instinctively leave toxic plants alone..ie..oleander,daffodils ect…
Calotropis is a common garden plant grown in Southern India. Its white sap is toxic. Could be included in the list.
10:15 to 10:25 is not correct, for at least one of the plants. Oleander can kill, even in small amounts. Livestock that even eat a few bites can die before getting far away from the bush. And even using a stick of it to roast food over a fire (or burning it as yard waste) can be really bad for human health.
I'm confused about rhododendrons because people in my place make juices and wines from them flowers from both pink & white ones..
#NiceShirt
Indeed, nice shirt
I once bit into a Dieffenbachia leaf when I was little, suffices to say I quickly came to regret that decision
😳once my mother cut a dieffenbachia and none of us knew it was poisonous. I was helping her and took the cut edge with my bare hand. I even spread the juice on my fingers - I felt nice. but very soon my hands started burning and itching all the way to the bone. i was crying in pain for an hour not being able to wash it off. This was the way i learned that bastard is poisonous 😅