‘Poisonous Parsnips’ Are Washing Up on Beaches in Scotland … – Atlas Obscura

On Monday, the North Ayrshire Council, which represents some 136,000 people in southwest Scotland, issued a warning on their website: beware, they said, of poisonous parsnips at the local beaches.

The plants in question, known as Hemlock water dropworts, are not actually parsnips, they just look like parsnips. Theyve been spotted on beaches in Ayrshire, on the Scottish coast, around 25 miles from Glasgow.

The council is especially urging pet owners and parents to be vigilant. If consumed, the plants can be deadly for animals, while just touching them can produce severe burns for humans.

The Hemlock water dropwortcan often be found in shallow waters and is most toxic during late winter and early spring time, notes the Ardrossan Coastguard Rescue Team (Search and Rescueits what we do) on Facebook.

The plantshave been known to be poisonous for decades now, if not millennia. In fact, theymight have been responsible for what Homer called the risus sardonicus, or thesardonic grin,a bizarre distortion of ones face. In ancient Sardinia, the plant was fed to older residents who couldno longer care for themselves, Scientific American reported in 2009, thus giving them agrin before they wereceremonially killed.

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'Poisonous Parsnips' Are Washing Up on Beaches in Scotland ... - Atlas Obscura

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