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Did you know the Sago Palm is toxic to pets?

by Tricia

676138.jpg I just received a new edition of my ASPCA newsletter and one article in particular caught my eye. It was about the increased incidence of pets being poisoned by the Sago Palm. This plant can also be quite toxic to young children.

The Sago Palm is common in warm climates, but it’s become more popular in Northern homes as a houseplant. The plant is native to Southern Japan. It’s an attractive plant with dark green leaves and a hairy trunk.

Since 2003, the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center has seen an increase in cases of Sago palm and Cycad poisonings by more than 200 percent. APCC data also reveals that 50 percent to 75 percent of those cases resulted in fatalities.

sago-palm.jpg A chemical in the plant called cycasin is toxic and often causes permanent liver damage as well as neurological damage if enough of the poison is absorbed by the body. The seeds are the most poisonous part of the plant, although all parts of this plant are toxic, and the effects on humans are seizures, coma and death. Of course the seeds are an attractive reddish color so children and possible curious pets might be drawn to the plant.

Clinical signs of toxic poisoning are vomiting, melena (blood in stool), Jaundice, increased thirst, hemorrhagic gastroenteritis, bruising and later liver damage, liver failure and death.

If you have young children or pets in your home and you’d like to check to see if your house or garden plants are toxic you can take a look at this list of Toxic Plants. There’s also a list of non-toxic plants that you might also want to look at if you are planning on adding more plants to your collection.






Filed Under: Family, Garden Tips, Health and Fitness, Home and Lifestyle, House Plants, Pets and Wildlife, Trees and Shrubs Tagged With: animal, ASPCA, attractive seeds, bruising, cats, chemical, children, Cycad, cycasin, dangerous, dark green leaves, death, dogs, garden plants, gastroenteritis, hairy trunk, home, House, houseplant, incidence, jaundice, list of toxic plants, lists, liver damage, liver failure, melena, non toxic plants, pets, plants, Poison, poison control center, poisoning, poisonous, Sago, Sago Palm, signs of toxicity, Southern Japan, thirst, toxic plant, vomiting

Mallow – just a lovely simple flower

by Tricia

Wordless Wednesday

IMG_4046

Not only is Mallow lovely, but it’s easy to grow. At least here in Southern Ontario. I suspect it would be easy to grow just about anywhere since it’s a hardy and fairly drought resistant plant.

I love those pretty pink flowers.

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Filed Under: Blooming today, Perennials, Photography, Wordless Wednesday Tagged With: close up, common flower, easy, easy care, easy to grow, flower, flowers, hardy, Lovely, macro, mallow, Mallow flower, pink, pink flower, plant, Southern Ontario, Wordless Wednesday, WW

For a weed rose Dr. Huey sure is pretty

by Tricia

IMG_4012

Dr. Huey is a rose that is commonly used as a root graft on Hybrid Tea Roses to make them stronger and possibly hardier.

If you grow roses, particularly ones that have grafted roots, you probably know that sometimes the root graft can grow it’s own shoots creating an odd looking rose bush with different colored flowers or that sometimes the graft root ends up taking over.

In my case the former owners of our home dug up their single Hybrid tea rose when they moved and I guess they left some of the graft root behind. Much to my surprise the following spring I noticed rose branches coming up out of the ground and realized that it must have been from their old rose. Of course it took me another year to realize that it was the graft root Dr. Huey.

I decided to keep the rose. After all, by accident, it was the first rose in my garden!

Dr. Huey seems to only bloom here once a year and it blooms on old wood so whether it blooms at all depend upon how harsh the last winter was. As a result my Dr. Huey weed rose only seems to bloom about every second year, but when it blooms it’s spectacular.

I don’t mind it’s red blooms one bit.

My Dr. Huey seems to bloom in late June. It’s blooms are long gone now, but not the memory of them.

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, rose, Toronto Tagged With: accident, bloom, blooms, blooms on old wood, dr huey, first rose, flower, flowers, garden, graft, graft shoots, graft take over, grafted root, grafted rose, grow, hardier, harsh winters, home, hybrid tea, Hybrid tea rose, June, left over roots, old wood, red flower, red rose, rose, rose bush, roses, spring, surprise, weed, weed rose, winter

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