Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
I have removed them from my kitchen counter, just in case theyare colchicums, and I had better wash my hands.
I'd say a Colchicum too. As to toxicity, I know of a dog, a dachshund, who died after retrieving a bulb that was rolling down a slope.... he gave the bulb a couple of chomps as he brought it back and later was one very dead dog. Not the best way to die.
What IS poison ivy please? The botanical name I mean? Read about it so often but I can't visualise it.
Poison ivy is classified as Rhus radicans or Toxicondendron radicans. Poison oak is Rhus diversiloba or Toxicondendron diversilobum and poison sumac is Rhus vernix or Toxicondendron vernix.
Thanks Rodger, that gives me a good idea as I have several Rhus species round about here and I'd hate to lose them as their autumn colour is superb. But they do have a reputation as poisonous to touch, or at least that one should be cautious not to get sap on one's hands and arms.
You must be a tough old bird Gote. Stinging nettles definitely DO sting me and I come out in little red bumps which are stinging and itchy. Wrapping the arm or finger in large dock leaves (of which I have a good supply) is very helpful though. What IS poison ivy please? The botanical name I mean? Read about it so often but I can't visualise it.Funnily enough, I sometimes see a good patch of colchicums in a farm paddock, usually where there has been an old wooden house many years ago. Stock don't seem to bother these. I dug (with permission) 30 bulbs last year from such a place.