![]() ![]() If it reaches an open wound, even contact can cause death. A full teaspoon makes death almost a certainty.Ĭoming into contact with the leaves or other parts of the plant can lead to dermatitis, dizziness and nausea. Less than a half teaspoon of tincture has been known to kill. A small amount might cause no more than a numb face and mouth and upset tummy. The length of time varies from about an hour to a bit longer, depending on how much poison is ingested and how long it stays in the stomach. The victim stays conscious till the end, which is usually from heart failure. It’s an agonizing death, very painful, provoking both anxiety which raises the heart rate and lowers the blood pressure, and also causes increasing paralysis. It burns in the mouth before numbness sets in, making speech difficult. There is no chemical antidote to Monkshood poisoning. If you do you will likely die and it won’t be pleasant. You also don’t want to grow it near any plants you might ingest later, for fear of contamination or accidentally eating a bit of Monkshood. A slightly shaded, sheltered spot away from garden traffic is ideal, as you don’t want to even brush up against this plant. It also hates being transplanted, hence the need to plant it in the right spot the first time. You want a location that drains well, as it hates standing in water. You don’t have to worry about deer with Monkshood, but some caterpillars find it tasty. In essence you want to develop a rich, slightly moist soil, similar to a forest floor. A good portion of cow manure is also helpful. In the winter it will die down to ground level. Monkshood grows in zones 3-7, so it’s fairly hardy once started. It can also take up to three years for it to reach its full height. It usually takes a couple of years for the plant to bloom, unless propagating by root division. The cold strata method works best, though you can try sewing them into pots on the winter solstice. It’s slow to germinate if you can get the seeds to germinate at all. Monkshood is particularly difficult to start. A second year plant, it grew to about three foot tall, with considerably more blooms than the first year. It’s one of, if not the most poisonous plants in the witch’s garden, along with Belladonna or Deadly Nightshade, another aconite. Equally lethal, Wolfsbane contains a different kind of poison and blooms earlier in the season, compared to Monkshood which blooms in late summer/autumn. It’s often confused with its yellow cousin, Wolfsbane ( Aconitum lycocotonum), another Aconite, with most people seeming to believe they are the same plant. It grows about three foot tall (one meter), has dark green palmate leaves and produces spiky clusters of hood like flowers, ranging in color from dark to purple to blue. Monkshood ( Aconitum napellus) is a perennial wildflower, found in mountainous and temperate regions of western and central Europe, as well as parts of Asia. This year they came back, after a pretty cold winter. It was the last bloom of Autumn in the witch’s garden. Both survived and even bloomed, unusual for Monkshood in its first year. But I found a source for live plants and ordered a couple. I have little patience for slow germinating seeds. ![]() I tried growing it from seed with no luck. This was the second year I’ve had Monkshood in my witch’s garden. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |