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FORAGING FOR WILD CARROT: How to identify Queen Anne's Lace against poisonous Hemlock!

  • Hollie Adams
  • Apr 18, 2019
  • 2 min read

When you are foraging for wild carrot, be very careful to identify that it is wild carrot, also known as Queen Anne's Lace, and not its look-alike, the poisonous hemlock. It's easy to make a mistake, so I am providing the best tips to keep you from disaster.

Nature has a really cool way of tricking us. We are all familiar with ladybird beetles (ladybugs), and now we see a bug that looks similar, but is brown instead of red. Why does Nature play with us? Sometimes to confuse predators. Sometimes to draw in a pollinator, or to invite predators to eat them – and die!

To protect you from a similar fate, let's do Show and Tell. I'm going to show you these two plants that look alike. And yes, one is poisonous. Very poisonous. CAUTION: WEAR GLOVES UNTIL YOU ARE SURE.

THIS NOT THAT

Do you remember Socrates, and how he died from consuming hemlock? This plant is just as potent now as it was then. All parts of the plant are poisonous to humans and to many animals. If not treated quickly, it can lead to paralysis and death. Even touching the plants with bare hands can be dangerous.

Wild carrot looks very similar to hemlock, yet is edible, so let's look at the differences. As always, never pick a plant you don't know, and certainly don't eat it if you're not sure!

THIS NOT THAT

Both of these plants are in the parsley family, and are biennial, which means they flower every second year. Both plants look like Queen Anne's Lace, with small white flowers in a wide umbrella shape.

BUT:

 

Wild Carrot (Queen Anne's Lace in year 2) Hemlock

Hairy green stems with no spots Purple spots on bare stems

Can have purple or red spot in the middle of white flowers No spots in white flowers

When crushed, leaves smell like carrots When crushed, leaves smell bad

Flowers create a flatter top and dry into a “bird's nest” Flowers create a curved top

Leaves have hairs Leaves are hairless

Flower clusters are close together Flower clusters can be separated

Plant usually grows to a maximum of 3' Plant can grow to 8'

 

To summarize, stems with purple splotches and no hairs, no purple spot in the flowers, are DANGEROUS. They smell musky or just plain bad when crushed. Don't touch these plants without gloves, as poisons can enter through your skin.

Queen Anne's Lace is easier. Picture the Queen with green, hairy legs and a purple spot in her flat white hair that looks turns into a bird's nest in the fall!

THIS NOT THAT

Wild carrots are edible! If you catch them at the end of the first year, when the leaves still look a bit like parsley, the roots are mildly tasty, and VERY nutritious. If they are woody, strip off the outer layer and try again. The leaves can be chopped and added to stew or soup to mimic the flavour of carrots.

As always, have cautious fun out there!

 
 
 

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