Weird question... no human children.. but do you have any idea why my mini tigers might want to chomp something that's lethal? I mean, can't they smell it's bad?
It was commonly used as a torture method for sugar plantation slaves in the Caribbean, since it would temporarily 'mute' them. This plant has a crazy role in history.
I love my houseplants especially my peace lilies. After listening to your warning about toxicity I will be rehoming them as my granddaughter has a learning difficulties and puts everything in her mouth. Thank you for this information.
Few years ago when my partner and i went down the rabbit hole of indoor plants, we were surprised at how many plants were NOT pet safe furthermore the lack of any warnings on the labels.
After 40 years of lots of plants and animals (farm and rescue).... I’ve never had one die from a houseplant. I have had a cat die from insecticide use :( I’d not worry unless a specific individual showed an interest in a specific plant and I’d put the plant up or out until I look it to determine what or if a problem.
@@TheAureliac Yes, discovered 2 plants I put in my garden are considered invasive in my area. Bought from a local, trusted, Mom and Pop. I've seen at least one in the Big Box stores too. 😢
Yesterday, my cat took a bite from my Azalea. So, I had to make a $100 phone call to ASPCA to find out if my cat was gonna be ok. She is fine, but I got rid of the plant.
$100 to find out if your cat needs medical attention is obscene and unethical. I can imagine many people would end up having to risk their pet's wellbeing over costs like this for things which should be free advice out of kindness towards another conscious organism.
I believe that the after life is quite peaceful. So.... I don't believe in hell and have no idea what is done to people who committed atrocities. Not your case or mine, for sure. .
Back in the 70s we had Oleander in our back yard, and us kids were told a cautionary tale of a family who went camping and used Oleander sticks as kebab skewers. I’m not sure everyone at the campout survived
Back in the 1950 ' s we had 4 beautiful large oleander bushes in our garden ... nobody cautioned us kids and they were commonly used as cut flowers in the house ... 😮😮
For preparing aloe, I have seen people peel the leaves, (I use a potato peeler) and you take the gel and soak it in cold cold water. You’ll see it turn yellow and you’ll want to repeat that process until the water is clear. I have only ever used it for topical purposes and it worked so much better for my sunburns than Alocaine. I would not suggest consuming it unless you really know for certain what you’re doing. Not all Aloe plants are equal!!!
I believe this is the most exhaustive list with chemical and symptoms indicated on RUclips. Thanks for all the effort. Only one I kept waiting for was foxglove, but not sure anyone brings them inside to grow. 😊
& I've never heard of Oleander as a houseplant, either! in Arizona, they have laws against burning them, in many places, 'cuz of the toxicity of the fumes.
The lilly in the valley is kinda an issue here around, considering that it grows here in the forests often along side by side with wild garlic, and there are people gathering the latter. The thing is that the leaves look pretty much similar so the only safe way to differentiate them is by smell, meaning if it doesn't smell like garlic you better not eat it.
Good video, this is actually the stuff I've been wondering ever since I started dealing with plants. Haven't seen a collective list of common poisonous plants at home. Another good list would be toxic plants at home. It's good to know which plants belong to which list and which are just generally safe. Funnily enough, anything worth looking is usually not good for people or animals.
This show is very knowledgeable full of life saving information and as usual very funny. Like I have said before you should be a comedian. educational and funny.
Hey thanks for taking my video suggestion. Like I said before lots of pet toxicity videos, lack of little one toxicity videos. Not every plant toxic to pets is also toxic to humans. Great video 😊❤
I brought my dad home to care for in 2020. I brought his 2 cats with us. They ate my peace lily to a nub. They also ate my palm and my dracaena to death. They were not effected at all and lived to be rehomed, i found out i was allergic.
Hi Rich. Hope you, your immediate family and your plant kids have a happy and healthy New Year🎉. Please continue giving us all the best videos ever. Best always, Billie from USA🤗😇😘
My crown of thorns are 5 years old and are beautiful. Wish we plant parents could send you pics of our success stories. My snake plants are 50 years old. I love my plant kids just like you. Thank goodness for your information. Stay well and keep up the good work😇😆
Didn't know that about my pothos, or zz, or oleander. Thanks for the help, Mistuh S, I'll be rearranging and repotting soon, glad to take these tips and others of yours into consideration 😊🎉❤
I was grabbing food for DoorDash one day, and walking back to the car when a cluster of the most beautiful, pink-tinged white flowers tumbled across my path. Had to pick them up, because it almost seemed like the universe giving me a present. :P Turns out they were oleander, and no bad effects from touching the broken stem, but I've always kind of been in love with them ever since!
Shamrocks/oxalis also have those crystals. Right now they're going into dormant mode for the winter, which is perfect. My squirrel (rescued in the fall, intended release in the sping) freaking loved both of mine. Thankfully they've died back, but she seems dead spent on destroying my raven zz. Not that she eats it. She keeps knocking the poor thing into the sink. Maybe she knows? lol
Thank you for sharing! This has been helpful especially because I have maybe 80% of the plants you listed. My pup at home won't bother the plants but we have slowly acclimated some for our backyard outside (I live in Florida), and now keep a few indoors that are less harmful for my pup and the little humans in our family.
I knew about some of these & am glad to hear the rest! Oleanders are planted heavily in landscaping in both Florida & Arizona, so I'm well aware of them! (I'm sure they grow in a lot of places, incl South Georgia & the Carolinas, but I've never been at many of them long enough to know how wide spread! A funny-ish story: I read a novel a few years ago where someone picked up a stick to roast his hot dog on & he died. The stick was from an oleander that had been pruned. IDK if that ever happened in true life (but she got the idea from somewhere!), but it's good to know what kind of wood you're cooking with!
@@SheffieldMadePlantsyes, very! I came back to add some info for your viewers (you probably know it already) as I'm re-watching this, & before I forget. Cardiac glycosides are used as heart medications. The most known is probably digitalis from the foxglove plant. One brand name here in the States is Digoxin. I gave it once to a dying man & naturally had to stay until he died. The med caused his heart to beat LONG after respiration stopped! The toxin in oleander is similar. To pronounce triterpenoid saponins (FYI, this is Southern US English. IDK how it's said elsewhere): try-turp'-eh-noid sap-ō-nins. Hope that helps! (I'm a nurse AND a word nerd! 😁) EDIT: one last word, bufadienolide (I had to Google this one & I had it WRONG!) is pronounced byu-fă-dī--ĕn'-ō-līde. (I still can't understand the IPA symbols! How can a 0 with a line through it "sound" like th as in "there"? That's the only one I've figured out, but I don't get where it came from!!)
Hahahaha always love watching your videos. You are so creative and it keeps me coming back. I don’t know how you do it but I thank you for your time and knowledge and commitment to this hobby.
I rarely see Madagascar palms on these kinds of lists but itself is very dangerous because even simply touching the leaves of it for too long, can cause skin irritation. Its thorns (if I remember correctly) and the poison from it was used during Egyptian times for their arrows which is crazy!
I’m so glad I watched your video! Had no idea about the aloe plant, mother in law tongue ( called snake plant here in Florida, USA, and particularly ivy and peace Lily…both of which our dachshunds seem to think are salads!1
Before I had cats I bought plants and never bothered to check if they were toxic, NOW , I have cats and won’t buy a plant unless i google first. I do want to say that from what I have seen and read kalanchoa is a medicinal plant, very widely used in Mexico and Central America. There is even an organization dedicated to its medicinal uses.
While taking a toxicology class on plants, I was left thinking "Wait, we have this at home." "This too!" "This one as well" Felt like I was playing a "Toxic Plant Bingo" or striking things off a checklist. Our garden has many of the plants on this list, plus some really toxic ones like Brugmansia.
Can I just say you’re videos are are so funny. I love your gentle sarcasm! Are you by any chance a teacher ? I would love to have you in my performing arts classroom with my students. You would be an awesome teacher especially when doing plays or films. 😂😂😂 Love your videos. Keep them coming !!
You could include the Madagascar palm if you redo this video. We took one over from a friend who got kids now. She got the plant from her dad. It was about 42years back then. We had it in a safe spot where the dogs and cats didn't get to it. But after I scratched myself on it and ended up with 3 days of symptoms it went into the bin. BTW your format is awesome!
I have a bit of a plant collection (containing some of these too) and thankfully, the only plant my dogs ever messed with was the nontoxic money tree. Even then they got over it after a while.
@@SheffieldMadePlants My father has always believed Mother-In-Law Tongues (or Snake plants) are BAD LUCK! In fact when his sister died suddenly at 45, his brother-in-law came home from the hospital and chucked the one they had off the balcony! Luckily, it didn't hit anyone on the street below. My Dad never allowed one in the house and I never have either. Like to play it safe. Great video, thank you....had NO idea about the Peace Lily OR the Lily of The Valley!
I would love to see a video on poisonous outdoor plants, like the daffodil for instance, and maybe one on poisonous holiday plants i.e. poinsettias. Just an idea. I am not sure how many holiday plants you're likely to find though. 🌿
A few years ago I took a flower of an oleander bush and I drank just one droplet of nectar, it's something that I used to do when I was a child, I felt lightheaded for a couple of days and I had diarrhea for several days; I then searched about the plant and I found out it was an oleander, I have never felt so lucky yet so scared, my sheer naiveness could have easily killed me!!!
I've always worried about poison plants. You've given a good list of some popular plants that can cause distress if eaten. I was surprised at some of my favorite plants being on that list. Have a blessed day.
I was lucky neither my son nor my dog at the time, ate my plants. My son wasn't a child that put everything in his mouth, didn't even like a soother. The only one I worried about was the string of pearls because they really looked like peas and they would fall off and both the dog and my son ate peas. The other one I really wanted was a Datura for outside it has the most beautiful huge white flowers and you can collect the seeds, but I wasn't comfortable with the death part if anyone put some in their mouth. So I passed on that one. Funny, I still look up how toxic the plants are and I know I'm not going to eat them. If you make mrs. Sheffield mad do check the peas in your plate. Don't worry they're supposedly only uncomfortable, not deadly.
I STILL want Datura plants! My kids are grown & gone, my cats & dogs have passed, so there's no-one to bother them but me! I wouldn't eat them if they weren't toxic! They're too pretty! Although, they might help w/ my rodent population who abandon the woods for my house when it gets too cold or too hot!! -- Did you know the Native Americans used Datura as an hallucinogenic for their Spirit Journeys & the shamans used it in not only ceremonies but as medicine as well? -- In my neck of the woods the white one's are called Angel Trumpets. Another, w/ dark purple flowers, I think goes by Devil's Trumpet! A third, Jimson Weed, readily grows wild here & teens (prob adults, too) have died by "experimenting" w/ Jimson Weed , trying to get an LSD-like "trip"! -- Bloo. I'd love to have one in each color, but at least the white & purple!
Dieffenbachia is called dumb cane because it can look cane-like, when losing the lower leaves. But unlike sugar, it results in a swollen throat and tongue which makes it hard to articulate - so it makes you 'dumb'.
I have another fun one from Breaking Bad, outside though. Ricinus Communis, you can make Ricin from the seeds. In spring, when I will sow those, I have to scar the seed first and that's the part where gloves are my best friend
The houseplant Sansevieria trifasciata, also known as mother-in-law's tongue, snake plant, or Saint George's sword, gets its name from the pointed tips of its leaves, which are said to resemble a mother-in-law's tongue. The sharp points of the leaves are also thought to symbolize a sharp tongue.
Aglaonemas also have calcium oxalate. I have over 30+ of these plants and am always careful when I cut them. By the way, mine are in LECA and are doing well so if you want to try LECA you can use an aglaonema plant to try it out! Merry Christmas!!!
@@sandrawells7398LECA stands for Lightweight expanded clay aggregate. It’s a planting medium used for semi-hydro and hydroponics. Half of my houseplants are in LECA.
I've got an aglaonema pictum tricolor, it was ok in the summer, but it's dropped all its leaves and gone dormant over winter. My house really isn't suitable to aglaonemas much as I love them 😞 But it's not dead, and is showing signs of breaking buds.
Pretty much everything in the aroid/arum family are full of calcium oxalate, which is unfortunate since that's probably far and away the most popular houseplant family except for maybe cacti. This includes Diffienbachia, which got the name "dumb cane" because eating it will irritate the membranes in your mouth and throat badly enough that you won't be able to talk for a while. Beyond that, plants in the same genus/family as each other usually have similar toxicity properties. The Crown of Thorns euphorbia doesn't look very appetizing but poinsettia and a bunch of other things are in the same genus, which the small mammals in your house are a lot more likely to attempt to eat.
Like the old way of referring to people who could not hear or speak as "deaf and dumb" where dumb meant they could not speak and had nothing to do with their smarts.
You've overlooked the common potato fruit that looks like tomatos. I've never tried them but I'm told they're quite toxic. Incidentally, I remember when you used to be able to buy potato flavored crisp made from potatoes. Nowadays most of what you can buy are different flavors -- some of them, pretty awful, and some them it's like eating glass. I suppose if they can add a flavour to broken up light bulbs they can pretty much achieve the same results. Anyway, interesting video.
I used your referral for the moisture meter. Only problem, it reads dry in most areas near the perimeter and moist or wet in a few spots near the roots. It’s a 6 foot BOP in a big planter. Should I water? 🤔Thanks.
LOL! Too funny. I don't plan to nibble on my plants anytime soon but this information is so good to have and done in a very memorable way! You're the best!
You've probably heard this a zillion times already by now, but in case you haven't: Dumb Cane got that name b/c when it's ingested, the ulcers you mentioned & the mouth/throat pain inhibit speaking, thus Dumb (unable to speak) Cane (b/c it has a bamboo-ey looking stem/trunk.
I was expecting Adenium obesum (desert rose) to hit the #1 spot, those things aren't to be messed with. How common they are/aren't might depend on where in the world you live though. Oleander was a good choice too. Begonias are also in the oxalate crystal club. Not sure on the concentration or anything, but I keep them away from my cat just in case.
Curious, something I used to do with my plants was to put fruit in the bottom of the pot when I repotted. I did this to add nutrients, but could this cause problems?
Hi again. Never thought plants could be this dangerous. I have about 13 or 14 avocado trees and a (new) mango tree. My oldest avocados is 28, soon to be 29 months old. That tree is my favourite and most precious. But many of its oldest leaves shriveled up and even died. There is a lot of browning on a lot of its leaves, epecially the older ones. There is no yellowing though. The most worrying part is that my tree has stopped growing for at leat 4 months. It should grow despite the winter. The fallen off leaves feel mushy and soft. The soil smells so bad, I don't hate the smell too much, but it's worrisome. The tree's health has sigificantly deterioated. This information screams ROOT ROT, my plants' worst enemy, or my bad habbit of my watering my plants when they aren't really that thirsty. I used chopsticks to break up the soil on the top few inches and I utterly disappointed when I realised that if it wasn't for that stick for balance, my beloved the would have fallen and uprooted. There are few root beneath the soil line, most of which are thin, dried up and dead. There used to be fungus gnat larvae, but they perhaps hid or diminished.The browning on the leaves stops whenever I water my tree. The issue is kind of watering imbalnce, but leaning towards root rot. I'm going to prune my tree tomorrow, I don't want to repot it. By the way, you really shocked about your recent videos about diatomaceous earth. It was amazing!
My cat has been eating my Aglaonema. I found out its dangerous with those crystals. Thankfully she's had no symptoms at all. I've moved it way out of her reach.
3:05 I have aloe Vera I actually have two ! NOW PLEASE DONT TELL ME ITS POISONOUS I will be so upset if it’s poisonous! (But I won’t throw it away I could never 😢) 😢😅
i actually made some aloe juice today, i made sure all of the aloin/latex was drained out properly and wiped it off at the end, however the aloe vera gel in the drink was so biitter and i was gagging whilst drinking it, i think the aloe vera bits you get in the aloe vera juice at asian supermarkets has been fermented a bit to make it sweeter coz the juice i made was undrinkable
Side note: dont let any empty pots at pets and kids reach. They are called "pots" thats just 1 isotope away to turn into "pot-ion", that is as toxic as radioactive. Dont let your little homo sapiens, cats or dogs eat it.
My mom has had an Amaryllis for about 20 years or so (or at least, a lineage of them - not sure if the current biggest one is still the original or not). It produced many offspring from the bulb, and she was always dividing them and giving them away as gifts. I gave one of the larger bulbs to a friend of mine who was not really into houseplants, and her response was, "Is this food?" When I responded 'no', she said, "It looks too big to not be food. I don't get the point."
Become a better plant parent 👉 sheffieldmadeplantsacademy.com
That’s not a reason for the name given to it !
Weird question... no human children.. but do you have any idea why my mini tigers might want to chomp something that's lethal? I mean, can't they smell it's bad?
@@gotwilla5583 🤷🏻♂️
I'm a recent subscriber and I got to say I love your sense of humor. Being funny and informative makes a great video.
Legend!
Its called dumb cane because eating a leaf will cause difficulty speaking and swallowing.
Interesting 🤔
It was commonly used as a torture method for sugar plantation slaves in the Caribbean, since it would temporarily 'mute' them. This plant has a crazy role in history.
@@hanthonyc oof.. never knew that. thanks for the info!
That's how you can remember NOT TO EAT! 😅
It's the sap that is toxic. It's present in all parts of the plant.
I have never been tempted to eat any of my houseplants.
The problem is kids & pets getting to them which they most certainly will.
Well, I have, but the plant in question was the basil in the kitchen. ;)
Nor me! I don't get it.
I love my houseplants especially my peace lilies. After listening to your warning about toxicity I will be rehoming them as my granddaughter has a learning difficulties and puts everything in her mouth. Thank you for this information.
Glad it was helpful 👍
Few years ago when my partner and i went down the rabbit hole of indoor plants, we were surprised at how many plants were NOT pet safe furthermore the lack of any warnings on the labels.
Yes very true
After 40 years of lots of plants and animals (farm and rescue).... I’ve never had one die from a houseplant.
I have had a cat die from insecticide use :(
I’d not worry unless a specific individual showed an interest in a specific plant and I’d put the plant up or out until I look it to determine what or if a problem.
It's also amazing how many invasive plants aren't labelled as such.
@@TheAureliac Yes, discovered 2 plants I put in my garden are considered invasive in my area. Bought from a local, trusted, Mom and Pop. I've seen at least one in the Big Box stores too. 😢
Yesterday, my cat took a bite from my Azalea. So, I had to make a $100 phone call to ASPCA to find out if my cat was gonna be ok. She is fine, but I got rid of the plant.
Maybe it's a good idea to research which plants you should buy if you have pets or children.
100$ for an informational phone call is insane. It's a greedy system in the US. The information/phone call would be for free in most parts of Europe.
$100 to find out if your cat needs medical attention is obscene and unethical. I can imagine many people would end up having to risk their pet's wellbeing over costs like this for things which should be free advice out of kindness towards another conscious organism.
That fact that PEACE lily is TOXIC is like an underhanded insult
🤔
From the plant world
I believe that the after life is quite peaceful. So....
I don't believe in hell and have no idea what is done to people who committed atrocities.
Not your case or mine, for sure.
.
It likes to live in peace , like most of us ! The best you could do is leave it alone !😊😊
Back in the 70s we had Oleander in our back yard, and us kids were told a cautionary tale of a family who went camping and used Oleander sticks as kebab skewers. I’m not sure everyone at the campout survived
Oh dear 😬
Oleander is also toxic even to 🔥-do’t do it.
Back in the 1950 ' s we had 4 beautiful large oleander bushes in our garden ... nobody cautioned us kids and they were commonly used as cut flowers in the house ... 😮😮
For preparing aloe, I have seen people peel the leaves, (I use a potato peeler) and you take the gel and soak it in cold cold water. You’ll see it turn yellow and you’ll want to repeat that process until the water is clear. I have only ever used it for topical purposes and it worked so much better for my sunburns than Alocaine. I would not suggest consuming it unless you really know for certain what you’re doing. Not all Aloe plants are equal!!!
Thanks for sharing
Aloe can put you in kidney failure, it’s that dye, I wouldn’t consume it even if the dye was removed.
Humour and knowledge ♥️ this is why I’m always waiting for the next video lol thank you for all your hard work
Love it!
I believe this is the most exhaustive list with chemical and symptoms indicated on RUclips. Thanks for all the effort. Only one I kept waiting for was foxglove, but not sure anyone brings them inside to grow. 😊
Great stuff 👍
& I've never heard of Oleander as a houseplant, either! in Arizona, they have laws against burning them, in many places, 'cuz of the toxicity of the fumes.
The lilly in the valley is kinda an issue here around, considering that it grows here in the forests often along side by side with wild garlic, and there are people gathering the latter. The thing is that the leaves look pretty much similar so the only safe way to differentiate them is by smell, meaning if it doesn't smell like garlic you better not eat it.
Good video, this is actually the stuff I've been wondering ever since I started dealing with plants. Haven't seen a collective list of common poisonous plants at home. Another good list would be toxic plants at home. It's good to know which plants belong to which list and which are just generally safe. Funnily enough, anything worth looking is usually not good for people or animals.
Cheers Yuppi!
I heard that most common (and gorgeous ) bulb flowers are poisonous as well ! Sad but true !Exercise caution , wherever you go !😊😊
This show is very knowledgeable full of life saving information and as usual very funny. Like I have said before you should be a comedian. educational and funny.
Keep the comments coming 😁
Hey thanks for taking my video suggestion. Like I said before lots of pet toxicity videos, lack of little one toxicity videos. Not every plant toxic to pets is also toxic to humans. Great video 😊❤
Thanks!
I brought my dad home to care for in 2020. I brought his 2 cats with us. They ate my peace lily to a nub. They also ate my palm and my dracaena to death. They were not effected at all and lived to be rehomed, i found out i was allergic.
Hi Rich. Hope you, your immediate family and your plant kids have a happy and healthy New Year🎉. Please continue giving us all the best videos ever. Best always, Billie from USA🤗😇😘
Thank you 😊. Happy new year to you too
Good info ... the discussion about the toxicity of these plants serve as a warning for us to be very careful in handling these plants ...
Thanks!
My crown of thorns are 5 years old and are beautiful. Wish we plant parents could send you pics of our success stories. My snake plants are 50 years old. I love my plant kids just like you. Thank goodness for your information. Stay well and keep up the good work😇😆
Sounds awesome!
Didn't know that about my pothos, or zz, or oleander. Thanks for the help, Mistuh S, I'll be rearranging and repotting soon, glad to take these tips and others of yours into consideration 😊🎉❤
@7.35 Common Ivy together with Nettle and Holly are favourites for native insects and Butterflies such as the Holly Blue Butterfly.
I was grabbing food for DoorDash one day, and walking back to the car when a cluster of the most beautiful, pink-tinged white flowers tumbled across my path. Had to pick them up, because it almost seemed like the universe giving me a present. :P Turns out they were oleander, and no bad effects from touching the broken stem, but I've always kind of been in love with them ever since!
Always loved Oleanders !😊😊
Thank you, Charles! i knew about some, but not all. good to know and I shared the info. Happy Holidays to yall!
Happy holidays!
Shamrocks/oxalis also have those crystals. Right now they're going into dormant mode for the winter, which is perfect. My squirrel (rescued in the fall, intended release in the sping) freaking loved both of mine. Thankfully they've died back, but she seems dead spent on destroying my raven zz. Not that she eats it. She keeps knocking the poor thing into the sink. Maybe she knows? lol
Oh really. I thought shamrock leaves were edible. Maybe it's the flowers
The video is an eye opener. I have some of these plants. Thank you. Again, enjoy the laughs 😄👍
Thanks for watching 😁
Thank you for sharing! This has been helpful especially because I have maybe 80% of the plants you listed. My pup at home won't bother the plants but we have slowly acclimated some for our backyard outside (I live in Florida), and now keep a few indoors that are less harmful for my pup and the little humans in our family.
Glad it was helpful!
We used to eat rubber plants as kids and it was quite OK because they just kept bouncing back up again.
Looks like you did , too !
I knew about some of these & am glad to hear the rest! Oleanders are planted heavily in landscaping in both Florida & Arizona, so I'm well aware of them! (I'm sure they grow in a lot of places, incl South Georgia & the Carolinas, but I've never been at many of them long enough to know how wide spread! A funny-ish story: I read a novel a few years ago where someone picked up a stick to roast his hot dog on & he died. The stick was from an oleander that had been pruned. IDK if that ever happened in true life (but she got the idea from somewhere!), but it's good to know what kind of wood you're cooking with!
A sobering story 😅
@@SheffieldMadePlantsyes, very! I came back to add some info for your viewers (you probably know it already) as I'm re-watching this, & before I forget. Cardiac glycosides are used as heart medications. The most known is probably digitalis from the foxglove plant. One brand name here in the States is Digoxin. I gave it once to a dying man & naturally had to stay until he died. The med caused his heart to beat LONG after respiration stopped! The toxin in oleander is similar.
To pronounce triterpenoid saponins (FYI, this is Southern US English. IDK how it's said elsewhere): try-turp'-eh-noid sap-ō-nins. Hope that helps! (I'm a nurse AND a word nerd! 😁)
EDIT: one last word, bufadienolide (I had to Google this one & I had it WRONG!) is pronounced byu-fă-dī--ĕn'-ō-līde. (I still can't understand the IPA symbols! How can a 0 with a line through it "sound" like th as in "there"? That's the only one I've figured out, but I don't get where it came from!!)
Merry Christmas 🎄 Mr and Mrs Sheffield!I love your work!Greetings from Maine
Happy holidays!
Hahahaha always love watching your videos. You are so creative and it keeps me coming back. I don’t know how you do it but I thank you for your time and knowledge and commitment to this hobby.
Awesome thank you!
most of the time your videos put a smile on my face ...... so thanks again ... have an awesome weekend
Thanks, you too!
Thank you.Appreciate your sense of humor and knowledge on it.
My pleasure!
I rarely see Madagascar palms on these kinds of lists but itself is very dangerous because even simply touching the leaves of it for too long, can cause skin irritation.
Its thorns (if I remember correctly) and the poison from it was used during Egyptian times for their arrows which is crazy!
Good to know!
I have one at home. Got thorns in my fingers a couple of times. Takes weeks to heal.
My father once poked himself in the eye on a yucca plant when vacuuming and that was pretty bad lol
Oops 😅
Thanks for a great video! I have a leaf nibbler too, but mine has 4 feet!🐈
Thanks for watching!
I’m so glad I watched your video! Had no idea about the aloe plant, mother in law tongue ( called snake plant here in Florida, USA, and particularly ivy and peace Lily…both of which our dachshunds seem to think are salads!1
Oops 😬
What they don't know doesn't hurt them , apparently !😊😊
Before I had cats I bought plants and never bothered to check if they were toxic, NOW , I have cats and won’t buy a plant unless i google first. I do want to say that from what I have seen and read kalanchoa is a medicinal plant, very widely used in Mexico and Central America. There is even an organization dedicated to its medicinal uses.
I love oleander. Here in central Texas it is one of the best performing plants during our hot dry summers
Just don’t have a nibble 😅
While taking a toxicology class on plants, I was left thinking "Wait, we have this at home." "This too!" "This one as well" Felt like I was playing a "Toxic Plant Bingo" or striking things off a checklist. Our garden has many of the plants on this list, plus some really toxic ones like Brugmansia.
🔛 this day Sunday morning. A reminder to all❣️
0:55 piece Lilly
1:33 Chinese evergreen (dumb cane)
2:19 sago palm
3:00 aloe
3:55 ficus tree. ( rubber tree)
4:40 snake plant
5:21 lily of valley
5:29 philodendron ( airoids )
6:54 photos. ( devil ivy )
7:06 English ivy
8:05 Alocalsia. ( airoids)
8:32 Eurhopribia
9:14 zz plant
9:47 cyiclamum
10:11 kalanchoe
10:33 oleander
Can I just say you’re videos are are so funny. I love your gentle sarcasm! Are you by any chance a teacher ? I would love to have you in my performing arts classroom with my students. You would be an awesome teacher especially when doing plays or films. 😂😂😂
Love your videos. Keep them coming !!
Thanks! I can confirm I’m not a teacher 😁
Happy new year Mr Sheffield 🎉🎉🎉!
Happy new year!
My mom accidentally poisoned our guinea pigs giving them oleander leaves, when I was 10 😢
You could include the Madagascar palm if you redo this video. We took one over from a friend who got kids now. She got the plant from her dad. It was about 42years back then.
We had it in a safe spot where the dogs and cats didn't get to it. But after I scratched myself on it and ended up with 3 days of symptoms it went into the bin.
BTW your format is awesome!
Didn’t know about that one thanks 👍
Sweet potato vine is a hallucinogenic to cats. I learned that the hard way...
What happened?
I do recommend processing your own aloe gel drink or salad if you need to prone. The texture is nice.
Oleanders are all over the sw USA. Great smelling flowers but such a dirty plant that you can’t kill in the end
Don’t think we have them here
I've seen drinks with aloe vera but we only kept the plant around for burns.
I have a bit of a plant collection (containing some of these too) and thankfully, the only plant my dogs ever messed with was the nontoxic money tree. Even then they got over it after a while.
Phew
The mother-in-law plant is called 'mother-in-laws sharp tongue' here 🤣
Good tips and warnings, thank you 👍🏻
Like it! 😂
@@SheffieldMadePlants My father has always believed Mother-In-Law Tongues (or Snake plants) are BAD LUCK! In fact when his sister died suddenly at 45, his brother-in-law came home from the hospital and chucked the one they had off the balcony! Luckily, it didn't hit anyone on the street below. My Dad never allowed one in the house and I never have either. Like to play it safe. Great video, thank you....had NO idea about the Peace Lily OR the Lily of The Valley!
@@lizstraub6621 Thank you 😊
5:56 Like it was a salad he got my dyin with that one 😂🤣 Bro you are hilarious this is very informative thanks
I appreciate that 😁
Good morning to you vary nice plans they all so beautiful and amazing happy Christmas to you and the family lovely 🌲🌲🌲🌲❤❤
Thank you! You too!
I would love to see a video on poisonous outdoor plants, like the daffodil for instance, and maybe one on poisonous holiday plants i.e. poinsettias. Just an idea. I am not sure how many holiday plants you're likely to find though. 🌿
A few years ago I took a flower of an oleander bush and I drank just one droplet of nectar, it's something that I used to do when I was a child, I felt lightheaded for a couple of days and I had diarrhea for several days; I then searched about the plant and I found out it was an oleander, I have never felt so lucky yet so scared, my sheer naiveness could have easily killed me!!!
Wow that’s sobering
You could do an episode "eating my houseplants" and sample some of the non-toxic plants
I've always worried about poison plants. You've given a good list of some popular plants that can cause distress if eaten. I was surprised at some of my favorite plants being on that list. Have a blessed day.
Cool thanks!
Another common but slightly toxic plant is the common Ficus benjamina (weeping fig).
Cheers, Mr Sheffield!
You bet!
I was lucky neither my son nor my dog at the time, ate my plants. My son wasn't a child that put everything in his mouth, didn't even like a soother.
The only one I worried about was the string of pearls because they really looked like peas and they would fall off and both the dog and my son ate peas.
The other one I really wanted was a Datura for outside it has the most beautiful huge white flowers and you can collect the seeds, but I wasn't comfortable with the death part if anyone put some in their mouth. So I passed on that one.
Funny, I still look up how toxic the plants are and I know I'm not going to eat them.
If you make mrs. Sheffield mad do check the peas in your plate. Don't worry they're supposedly only uncomfortable, not deadly.
Thanks for the heads up!
Thanks for the heads up!
I STILL want Datura plants! My kids are grown & gone, my cats & dogs have passed, so there's no-one to bother them but me! I wouldn't eat them if they weren't toxic! They're too pretty! Although, they might help w/ my rodent population who abandon the woods for my house when it gets too cold or too hot!! -- Did you know the Native Americans used Datura as an hallucinogenic for their Spirit Journeys & the shamans used it in not only ceremonies but as medicine as well? -- In my neck of the woods the white one's are called Angel Trumpets. Another, w/ dark purple flowers, I think goes by Devil's Trumpet! A third, Jimson Weed, readily grows wild here & teens (prob adults, too) have died by "experimenting" w/ Jimson Weed , trying to get an LSD-like "trip"! -- Bloo. I'd love to have one in each color, but at least the white & purple!
Thank you great information 👍 ❤
You bet!
New subscriber here. You are hilarious and educational. Thanks for sharing your knowledge! 🙂
Thanks for subbing!
Thank you for sharing.🙏
My pleasure 😊
Very interesting thanks😊
You bet!
love the information and you are quite the comic character :)
Thank you kindly!
Dieffenbachia is called dumb cane because it can look cane-like, when losing the lower leaves. But unlike sugar, it results in a swollen throat and tongue which makes it hard to articulate - so it makes you 'dumb'.
Thanks 🙏
I have another fun one from Breaking Bad, outside though. Ricinus Communis, you can make Ricin from the seeds. In spring, when I will sow those, I have to scar the seed first and that's the part where gloves are my best friend
Ooo very good
The houseplant Sansevieria trifasciata, also known as mother-in-law's tongue, snake plant, or Saint George's sword, gets its name from the pointed tips of its leaves, which are said to resemble a mother-in-law's tongue. The sharp points of the leaves are also thought to symbolize a sharp tongue.
I love your channel. Period.
I appreciate that
Aglaonemas also have calcium oxalate. I have over 30+ of these plants and am always careful when I cut them. By the way, mine are in LECA and are doing well so if you want to try LECA you can use an aglaonema plant to try it out! Merry Christmas!!!
Thanks for the tips!
What is LECA?😊
@@sandrawells7398LECA stands for Lightweight expanded clay aggregate. It’s a planting medium used for semi-hydro and hydroponics. Half of my houseplants are in LECA.
@@sandrawells7398 little clay balls used for semi hydro
I've got an aglaonema pictum tricolor, it was ok in the summer, but it's dropped all its leaves and gone dormant over winter. My house really isn't suitable to aglaonemas much as I love them 😞
But it's not dead, and is showing signs of breaking buds.
Great video 😊
Cheers!
Great video!! 😺😻
Cheers!
It’s called a dumb cane plant because in ancient times, it was used as a torture weapon, they chewed it and this burned the mouth.
Thanks for sharing
Part two: How to deal with collapsed cabinets and toxic plants falling from the sky.
😬
Pretty much everything in the aroid/arum family are full of calcium oxalate, which is unfortunate since that's probably far and away the most popular houseplant family except for maybe cacti. This includes Diffienbachia, which got the name "dumb cane" because eating it will irritate the membranes in your mouth and throat badly enough that you won't be able to talk for a while.
Beyond that, plants in the same genus/family as each other usually have similar toxicity properties. The Crown of Thorns euphorbia doesn't look very appetizing but poinsettia and a bunch of other things are in the same genus, which the small mammals in your house are a lot more likely to attempt to eat.
Thanks for sharing 👍
Like the old way of referring to people who could not hear or speak as "deaf and dumb" where dumb meant they could not speak and had nothing to do with their smarts.
You've overlooked the common potato fruit that looks like tomatos. I've never tried them but I'm told they're quite toxic. Incidentally, I remember when you used to be able to buy potato flavored crisp made from potatoes. Nowadays most of what you can buy are different flavors -- some of them, pretty awful, and some them it's like eating glass. I suppose if they can add a flavour to broken up light bulbs they can pretty much achieve the same results. Anyway, interesting video.
You are awesome, thank you
Thanks for watching 😁
5:07 wow! Nice garden !
😁
Home made video cuts very impressive!
Thank you 😊
I used your referral for the moisture meter. Only problem, it reads dry in most areas near the perimeter and moist or wet in a few spots near the roots. It’s a 6 foot BOP in a big planter. Should I water? 🤔Thanks.
If it’s dry in the bottom half then water
@@SheffieldMadePlants good thing I got the longer one, it’s a deep pot. Do you aerate with the moisture meter? Thanks!
@@capcom4eva yes sometimes if the soil is compacted
You did not mention the effects the cactus (@ 8:54) has when ingested.
Watching this and actually having 3 of these plants next to me on my table where I eat and next to my bed xD
😬
LOL! Too funny. I don't plan to nibble on my plants anytime soon but this information is so good to have and done in a very memorable way! You're the best!
Marvellous thank you!
Plants can't run away from herbivores. Their defense is oxalates. I encourage you to read the book toxic superfoods by Sally K Norton.
You've probably heard this a zillion times already by now, but in case you haven't: Dumb Cane got that name b/c when it's ingested, the ulcers you mentioned & the mouth/throat pain inhibit speaking, thus Dumb (unable to speak) Cane (b/c it has a bamboo-ey looking stem/trunk.
Always good to get a reminder 😁
I was expecting Adenium obesum (desert rose) to hit the #1 spot, those things aren't to be messed with. How common they are/aren't might depend on where in the world you live though. Oleander was a good choice too.
Begonias are also in the oxalate crystal club. Not sure on the concentration or anything, but I keep them away from my cat just in case.
Oh my goodness! I just bought two. But my dogs gave not touched them.
Thanks for the heads up
Thank you 🌹🐱
My pleasure 😊
You are funny, your gestures,!!!😂😂😂😂
Thanks 😊
Most of these are indoor air purifier not for eating.
As for pets keep all plants away.
You do make me larf. Nearly choked on my coffee 😂😂
😁
Don't eat them. Don't smoke them.
Curious, something I used to do with my plants was to put fruit in the bottom of the pot when I repotted. I did this to add nutrients, but could this cause problems?
Did it attract flies?
I don’t think so no
@@Drumgobonk08 I’d avoid that personally
Some supposed healthy vegetables like spinach and swiss chard are very high in calcium oxalates.
The calcium oxalates tend to breakdown to some degree during the cooking process.
@Thi-Nguyen True. However, some people like me are very sensitive to oxalates so I personally avoid high oxalate foods.
Hi again. Never thought plants could be this dangerous.
I have about 13 or 14 avocado trees and a (new) mango tree. My oldest avocados is 28, soon to be 29 months old. That tree is my favourite and most precious. But many of its oldest leaves shriveled up and even died. There is a lot of browning on a lot of its leaves, epecially the older ones. There is no yellowing though. The most worrying part is that my tree has stopped growing for at leat 4 months. It should grow despite the winter. The fallen off leaves feel mushy and soft. The soil smells so bad, I don't hate the smell too much, but it's worrisome. The tree's health has sigificantly deterioated.
This information screams ROOT ROT, my plants' worst enemy, or my bad habbit of my watering my plants when they aren't really that thirsty. I used chopsticks to break up the soil on the top few inches and I utterly disappointed when I realised that if it wasn't for that stick for balance, my beloved the would have fallen and uprooted. There are few root beneath the soil line, most of which are thin, dried up and dead. There used to be fungus gnat larvae, but they perhaps hid or diminished.The browning on the leaves stops whenever I water my tree. The issue is kind of watering imbalnce, but leaning towards root rot.
I'm going to prune my tree tomorrow, I don't want to repot it. By the way, you really shocked about your recent videos about diatomaceous earth. It was amazing!
Sorry to hear about your plant. I’ve found them to be tricky to keep alive at least indoors. Sounds like you need to repot unfortunately
My cat has been eating my Aglaonema. I found out its dangerous with those crystals. Thankfully she's had no symptoms at all. I've moved it way out of her reach.
Good save 👍
3:05 I have aloe Vera I actually have two ! NOW PLEASE DONT TELL ME ITS POISONOUS I will be so upset if it’s poisonous! (But I won’t throw it away I could never 😢) 😢😅
Just don't eat the yellow stuff!
i actually made some aloe juice today, i made sure all of the aloin/latex was drained out properly and wiped it off at the end, however the aloe vera gel in the drink was so biitter and i was gagging whilst drinking it, i think the aloe vera bits you get in the aloe vera juice at asian supermarkets has been fermented a bit to make it sweeter coz the juice i made was undrinkable
Doesn’t sound like my cup of tea
Side note: dont let any empty pots at pets and kids reach. They are called "pots" thats just 1 isotope away to turn into "pot-ion", that is as toxic as radioactive. Dont let your little homo sapiens, cats or dogs eat it.
Is it true that you can tell if plants are not edible, by putting them to the edge of your mouth, or under your arm?
Not heard that
My mom has had an Amaryllis for about 20 years or so (or at least, a lineage of them - not sure if the current biggest one is still the original or not). It produced many offspring from the bulb, and she was always dividing them and giving them away as gifts.
I gave one of the larger bulbs to a friend of mine who was not really into houseplants, and her response was, "Is this food?" When I responded 'no', she said, "It looks too big to not be food. I don't get the point."
Oh dear 😅
Poor girl! I hope she listened to you!