Has anyone seen plants like these?

   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #1  

ccsial

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A few of these things showed up last year. This year there are 10 times as many. I have no idea what they are. The stems are about an inch in diameter and purple. They are brittle and filled with white stuff. They break real easy. They produce a lot of purple berries too. I wonder if they can be killed off. I don't think I'll make wine from them.
 

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   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #2  
They almost look like eldiberries.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #3  
Pokeweed, aka "Polk Salad" as in Polk Salad Annie.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #4  
leaf shape doesn't look right for elderberry.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #5  
Yeah. Pokeweed. Young new leaves cook up similar to spinach.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #7  
Definitely NOT elderberry.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #8  
Yep, "polk" or pokeweed is what we always called it. In Southern Illinois it's prolific. When I was a young boy my parents and grand parents would eat it often and I grew to have a liking for it. I can remember it always grew heavily along the rail road tracks that ran between the small towns locally and in shaley areas around the abandoned strip mines. But you can find it growing just about anywhere. I would always stop and pick a "mess" if I saw any young plants on my way home while riding my coveted Yamaha TY175 trials bike ( sorry...taking a side trip down memory lane here....).

I think it is actually pretty poisonous if you eat the stems or leaves that are longer than about 6 inches. You would boil it a couple of times and change the water after each boil...just to make sure you didn't kill anyone;). The berries are poisonous too to most animals but birds have no problem eating them and then leaving quite a mess on any vehicle parked under a tree. Any herbicide ( Roundup etc.) should kill it if it's becoming a problem.
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these? #9  
darryl and others who say it's pokeweed are right on,and as darryl said it has to be boiled several times to make it safe to eat.I never tried it because of the toxic thing,it grows around here and have never seen any critters eating it except birds eating the berries. russ
 
   / Has anyone seen plants like these?
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Pokeweed, interesting. Thanks for the responses. Last year the stuff looked really bad and dead in the spring so this year I cut it down so I don't have to look at it all winter. There was a lot more this year bordering the woods in front of my house. I hope this isn't going to get a lot worse. I've never seen it before last year anywhere on my property. I wonder where it came from.

I'll have to keep after it during the year I guess. Something else to do. I don't think I'll be eating it though.

I wore leather gloves cleaning it up and they are now purple. Probably permanently.:)

I found this interesting tidbit on Wikopedia.
"The United States Declaration of Independence was written in fermented pokeberry juice"
 

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