A Dangerous Beauty
By Mistyck Moon
@MistyckMoon (935)
United States
July 25, 2019 12:09pm CST
Although we are camping in South Dakota right now, before we came here we were camping in Butte, Montana for about a month. During one of our trips to a truckstop to dump garbage and get water, i saw this beautiful unique flower by the trash bins. I had never seen a flower like this before so I decided to use an app called Plantnet to identify it. Apparently this wild growing plant can be dangerous in high doses for human consumption but has also been used for medicinal purposes. The following information about this flower I got from Wikepedia on the app.
"Hyoscyamus niger, commonly known as henbane, black henbane or stinking nightshade, is a poisonous plant in the family Solanaceae. Henbane is used for herbal medicinal purposes for ailments of the bones, rheumatism, toothache, asthma, cough, nervous diseases, and stomach pain. Henbane ingestion by humans is followed by peripheral inhibition and central stimulation. Common effects of henbane ingestion are hallucinations, dilated pupils, restlessness, and flushed skin. Less common effects are tachycardia, convulsions, vomiting, hypertension, hyperpyrexia, and ataxia. Initial effects typically last for three to four hours, while after effects may last up to three days. The side effects of ingestion are dryness in the mouth, confusion, locomotor and memory disturbances, and farsightedness. Overdosages result in delirium, coma, respiratory paralysis, and death. Low and average dosages have inebriating and aphrodisiac effects."
Quite interesting don't you think? Has anyone else ever heard of this plant?
4 people like this
4 responses
@YuleimaVzla (1857)
• Maracaibo, Venezuela
19 Aug 19
I have never seen this flower here in my country, I suppose it can be seen elsewhere, it is a danger for those naive people who pick flowers in their path and do not know that they are only deadly, I consider myself one of those naive, sometimes I pick flowers just thinking that they are not poisonous, there are some that only by touching them active a toxic poison in the skin, next time I will take care of the flowers that I collect.
1 person likes this

@YuleimaVzla (1857)
• Maracaibo, Venezuela
30 Aug 19
@MistyckMoon That's true! imagine that you want to take a picture of a flower or some other bush, then you want to rearrange the flower so that you can take it from a better angle and innocently with your hand, in fact your information is useful since we are very reckless for the most part when making this.
1 person likes this
@MistyckMoon (935)
• United States
29 Aug 19
I am always photographing flowers of all kinds and often I don't know whst they are. I never pick any flower becausevI love to see them just as they are and I only touch the flowers that are common and I am familiar with. That's a good thing for me because I have photographed other flowers before that friends on social media recognized as being poisonous, so I now make sure to keep up my practice of never touching them. I just take their pictures.
1 person likes this

@MistyckMoon (935)
• United States
29 Aug 19
The information I read about them did not mention anything about turning into berries. I'm just glad that I never pick or touch wild flowers unless I know them.
1 person likes this
@JohnRoberts (109841)
• Los Angeles, California
25 Jul 19
Look but don't consume!
1 person likes this
@MistyckMoon (935)
• United States
29 Aug 19
That's my policy and I include do not pick or touch them. 

1 person likes this
@ihasaquestion (8273)
•
25 Jul 19
Never heard of it, but that doesn't matter because it's not everyday that I eat flowers.
1 person likes this
@MistyckMoon (935)
• United States
29 Aug 19
I've never eaten any kind of flower... Lol!
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