Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Cancelled Stamp From Iceland Featuring A Dragon From The Coat Of Arms
The Elderberry, Sambucus nigra, Black elder, European elder, European black elderberry, Der Schwarze Holunder, Schwarzer Flieder, Fliederbeeren or Crna Bazga ili Zovina (Zova). High quality photo
Closeup of a white blooming Giant Hogweed or Heracleum mantegazzianum plant and its seed heads.Toxic perennial herb in the meadow.
Angelica archangelica plant in an early summer English garden border
A closeup shot of the flowers of a cow parsley plant
Valeriana officinalis - Real valerian. Common name, Valerian.
Heracleum maximum, Cow Parsnip or  Indian Celery, is the only member of the genus Heracleum native to North America. Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve, Oakland, California. Apriaceae.
Forest angelica in the Rhön Biosphere Reserve
Heracleum Sosnowski, or Sosnowski's borschivny - a dangerous allergic plant that grows in the summer. Poisonous inflorescence. A poisonous perennial plant.
Cow parsnip at Milgara Ridge  Golden Gate National Recreation Area  on a foggy spring day.
honeysuckle   with  flowers and  leaves isolated on white background
A Hemp Agrimony, Eupatorium cannabinum, flowerhead, with a Great Pied Hoverfly, Volucella pellucens, aka Pellucid Fly or Pellucid hoverfly, feeding.
Giant Hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium) growing in nature.
The Vine Pub of Goudhurst in Kent, England. This is a commercial location.
Scanned white Clematis (Guernsey Cream) isolated on white background.
Medium to tall, rather bristly biennial; stem erect, purple or purple spotted. Leaves 2-3 pinnate, dark green, but eventually turning purple; leaflets oval, toothed. Flowers white, 2mm, in compound umbels which are nodding in bud, the petals hairless; bracts usually absent, bracteoles hairy.  Fruit oblong, tapered towards the apex, 4-7mm, often purple.\nHabitat: Rough grassland, semi shaded places, on well drained soils, generally in low attitudes.\nFlowering Season: May-July.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe; absent from the Faeroes, Iceland, Norway, Finland and Spitsbergen.\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands for the described Habitats.\nToxicity:\nChaerophyllum temulum contains (mainly in the upper parts and fruits) a volatile alkaloid chaerophylline, as well as other (probably glycosidally bound) toxins, the chemistry and pharmacology of which has, as yet, been but little studied. Externally, the sap of the plant can cause inflammation of the skin and persistent rashes. If consumed, the plant causes gastro-intestinal inflammation, drowsiness, vertigo and cardiac weakness. Human poisonings have seldom been observed, because the plant lacks aromatic essential oils that could lead to its being confused with edible umbellifers used to flavour food. It is, however, used occasionally in folk medicine. Animal poisonings by the plant are commoner than those of humans, pigs and cattle thus intoxicated exhibiting a staggering gait, unsteady stance, apathy and severe, exhausting colic, ending sometimes in death. \nHerbal medicine:\nChaerophyllum temulum has been used in folk medicine, in small doses, to treat arthritis, dropsy, and chronic skin complaints, and as a spring tonic. The early modern physician Boerhaave (1668–1738) once successfully used a decoction of the herb combined with Sarsaparilla to treat a woman suffering from leprosy – in the course of which treatment temporary blindness was a severe side effect following each dose (source Wikipedia).
Coat of arms of the British capital city London.
Elderberry tree
angelica forest blooms in the forest
Flowers of tall meadow rue, a delicate streamside wildflower of eastern North America, also known as \
Trichodesma indicum is harvested from the wild for local use as a medicine and sometimes as a food.
Flag of wales waving with highly detailed textile texture pattern
A closeup shot of a poison hemlock plant.
Space for text
Honeysuckle or Lonicera flowering branch isolated on white. White fragrant Lonicera flowers.
A flower-head of the Poison Hemlock (Conium maculatum), an introduced and toxic species, growing in central Chile. All parts of the plant are poisonous, possibly even deadly to humans, and remain so even months or years after the plant dies at the end of its two-year lifespan.
Angelica archangelica flowers isolated on white background
High mountain wildflowers, Sierra de Gredos
The great flowering cow parsnip - a poisonous plant, growing on the edge of a birch grove
Photo taken at Cape Greco in Cyprus. Nikon D7200 with Nikon 200mm macro lens
Free Images: "bestof:Malleus maleficarum (ed. II) - Facsimile 00024.svg Malleus maleficarum ed II - Facsimile svg 00023 00025 Hammer of Witches - p00024 - Facsimile Hexenhammer -"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day