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Don’t Stop and Smell These Flowers: The
Poison Garden at Alnwick
The
beauty of vast, luxurious gardens makes for some very popular places to visit,
especially when looking for a restorative escape from the modern world. But
there is one garden whose popularity comes for far different reasons. At
Alnwick Castle in Northumberland, England, you will find a nursery of the
deadliest variety.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Source: Cravens
Alongside the typical gardens you would expect to see near an
English castle is the Poison Garden of Alnwick. Established in 2005, this
unusual garden houses more than one hundred infamous killers; plants that
throughout history have been responsible for countless deaths and illnesses,
and used by many as an instrument of murder.
Source: Blogspot
Upon entering, visitors are given specific warnings to which they
better take heed; no one is to touch, ingest, or even smell any of the
vegetation located behind the black gate. Parents who are willing to take their
children on this tour must keep a very close eye on their young ones at all
times. The cost of disobeying the rules in this garden are much more severe
than a grounds-keeper scolding.
Source: Wikipedia
While the trumpet plant Brugmansia was described by the duchess as
“an amazing aphrodisiac before it kills you” and relaying that Victorian ladies
sprinkled the pollen in their tea for LSD-inspired effects, further research
into this plant suggests that the kind death it serves up is nowhere near
pleasant – causing sweat-soaked convulsions and foaming at the mouth.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Even with the strict guidelines in place, visitors still on
occasion succumb to the effects of the plants each year, most commonly by
passing out from sniffing a few too many toxic fumes. The garden’s laurel
hedges also grow wild in some parts of Britain, and have caused numerous deaths
outside Alnwick. Locals who cut down the laurel hedges and attempt to haul them
away in trucks often end up crashing when the freshly cut branch fumes put them
to sleep while driving.
Though every portion of the Arum lily is poisonous, people still
sometimes “cook the toxins out” and eat the leaves.
Source: Biddenham Gardeners Association
Source: Biddenham Gardeners Association
Potentially deadly, many of the plants contained within this
garden are quite beautiful; an irony of nature that many have found captivating
over the years.
The Castor Oil plant contains the deadly and poisonous ricin
within its seeds
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
It was this paradox—along with a trip to the infamous Medici
poison garden in Italy—that set Duchess Jane Percy of Northumberland’s “toxic”
dream in motion. The Duchess wanted to transform the disheveled castle gardens
into a unique tourist destination that would, oddly enough, appeal to kids.
Source: Kate
Measures
“I thought, ‘This is a way to interest children,'” Percy says. “Children
don’t care that aspirin comes from a bark of a tree. What’s really interesting
is to know how a plant kills you, and how the patient dies, and what you feel
like before you die.”
Nicandra (also known as the shoo-fly plant) is a close relative to
Deadly Nightshade
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
She continues, “What’s extraordinary about the plants is that it’s
the most common ones that people don’t know are killers.”
Source: Paradise Express
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
The garden has an additional section for plants that are ‘toxic’
in a different way. Duchess Percy has included a section in which she grows a
variety of plants typically sought for drug use, from cannabis to cocaine. She
and the guides use this portion of the park as a lead-in for drug education.
“It’s a way of educating the children, without them knowing they’re being
educated” she says. A natural narrative on death and drugs: not exactly two
topics that might be of immediate interest to children, but ones that you will
surely encounter near Alnwick Castle.
Live In Peace & Love.
__._,_.___
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