Ornamental Yew bushes

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  • jon_norstog
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 3896

    #1

    Ornamental Yew bushes

    They are not good for wildlife! The berries are sweet - I used to eat them when I was a kid - but they are death on deer, elk, moose, etc. From Idaho Fish and Game:

    The third of four “Talk Shop with Idaho Fish and Game” gatherings will take place on March 21 in St. Maries. The gathering will be held from 6-8 p.m. at the Cormana Building ( 1100 W Idaho St., St. Maries, 83861).


    And yeah, I am still above the grass and still hunting and fishing - just not as fast.

    jn
  • Allen
    Moderator
    • Sep 2009
    • 10580

    #2
    Originally posted by jon_norstog
    I am still above the grass and still hunting and fishing - just not as fast.
    Good to hear.

    I too use to eat the berries from the Japanese or Chinese Yew. I heard that some people made jelly from them. There is a hard seed at the end of the berry that may not be edible.

    Oleander leaves have a sweet taste I hear but every part of the shrub is poisonous to humans and animals. Polk (Polk Salad Annie) leaves are edible but I hear the rest of the plant isn't.

    Then there's Hemlock. I don't know about animals but it is deadly to humans. I don't know who would want to eat that though anyway.

    There's lots of poisonous plants around, even house plants, particularly those with heart shaped leaves.

    Comment

    • lyman
      Administrator - OFC
      • Aug 2009
      • 11266

      #3
      not sure what they were,, but we used to have some ornamental bushes in the medians of some of the local highways,

      then every fall\winter there would be a great number of birds and a few squirrels splatted across said roads,


      seems the berries fermented rather easily in the sun, the the animals would get a buzz and end up roadkill,


      city pulled up the bushes, and planted grass

      Comment

      • Allen
        Moderator
        • Sep 2009
        • 10580

        #4
        I use to work at an industrial plant. Pigeons were a big problem crapping on everything so the company bought what they called "crazy corn". This was cracked corn tainted with "something" that made the birds disoriented. They would stop eating or crash dive into the pavement or equipment.

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