AM
To: Stanley Scharf ; Regi Teasley
Cc: darlingtonbets ; Maryfaith Miller
; anneb.cl...@gmail.com;
bluewing-gr...@googlegroups.com; CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Angry birds (Am robins!)
Looking up a picture of American pokeweed, I am surprised to see on Wikipedia
it is the sa
: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Angry birds (Am robins!)
The most notable act occurred in Burlington, New Jersey, at the 1738
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Quakers. Dressed as a soldier, he concluded a
diatribe against slavery, quoting the Bible saying that all men should be equal
under God, by plunging
utiful, interesting plant. Just don't
>> eat it or handle it without gloves.
>> Betsy
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
>>
>> Original message
>> From: Maryfaith Miller
>> Dat
g plant. Just don't
>> eat it or handle it without gloves.
>> Betsy
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
>>
>> ---- Original message
>> From: Maryfaith Miller
>> Date: 10/26/19 12:08 PM (GMT
(GMT-05:00)
> To: anneb.cl...@gmail.com
> Cc: Regi Teasley , bluewing-gr...@googlegroups.com,
> CAYUGABIRDS-L
> Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Angry birds (Am robins!)
>
> I have used pokeweed berries in my forest kindergarten class to dye wool an
> intensely beautiful shade of purple
Agreed! I have some pokeweed growing behind the shed, no intention of removing
(or tasting) it. I went to wiki initially to see if the toxins were
intoxicating Anne’s robins but there’s no obvious support for that from this
plant. I have seen robins et al get ripped on late season “raisins” from
,
bluewing-gr...@googlegroups.com, CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Angry birds (Am robins!) I have used pokeweed
berries in my forest kindergarten class to dye wool an intensely beautiful
shade of purple. 5-6-7 year olds, harvested, crushed, boiled over a campfire
and stirred the p
I have used pokeweed berries in my forest kindergarten class to dye wool an
intensely beautiful shade of purple. 5-6-7 year olds, harvested, crushed,
boiled over a campfire and stirred the pot full of wool roving and pokeweed
berries. My students love knowing which plants are deadly poisonous. I ha
And I am living proof that eating young pokeweed is not deadly. We didn’t use 3
waters either, although drained it.
But I am NOT suggesting everyone try it. Young spinach causes less panic. Or
try lambs quarters.
Anne
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 26, 2019, at 9:56 AM, Regi Teasley wrote:
>
Yup everyone, I am fully aware of the toxicity of pokeweed and allow a nice big
plant to grow up where I can see it fruit every year without any problems.
There are many berries toxic to humans out there. And toxic plants. But they
feed birds and other wildlife. Pokeweed berries are especially
I understand Pokeweed is poisonous to humans. Your thoughts on keeping these
plants?
Regi
What good is a house if you don’t have a tolerable planet to put it in? Henry
David Thoreau
> On Oct 26, 2019, at 9:01 AM, anneb.cl...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
> This morning I have a large number of ro
For the record, don’t try this at home! Poke berries are very toxic to humans
and many other mammals though some foxes, mice,etc are resistant, as are many
songbirds that distribute the seeds after ingestion. Make sure your kids do NOT
ingest these.
Poke leaves are made edible only after three s
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