News

Most Ohioans eagerly anticipate summer. Ohio in the summer offers a variety of experiences, from enjoying warm weather and ...
Poisonous plant has spread to all 88 Ohio counties. ... Plants should be dug out, with the entire root removed. They should then be placed in a construction-grade trash bag and disposed of.
D has been used as a pesticide since the 1940s, and gained notoriety as a component of Agent Orange, used by U.S. forces in ...
Both of these plants are present in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and both will give you an ugly, red, itchy rash if you touch them. The rash is not contagious from person to person.
Summer is here and in full swing. Also here are ticks, mosquitoes, bagworms, and poison hemlock. Numbers of ticks have risen ...
3 poisonous plants in the Great Smoky Mountains to avoid on your next hike. ... The plant's stem sometimes has little white hairs on it, according to the Ohio State University extension.
Poison hemlock or Conium maculatum is a non-native plant that was brought to the United States as an ornamental in the late 1800s. All parts of the plant are poisonous and contain highly toxic ...
The weed prefers sunny and moist environments, often […] COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) – Ohioans may spot clusters of white flowers along roadsides or fence lines as a poisonous plant blooms across ...
The weed prefers sunny and moist environments, ... In Ohio, the poisonous plant is most abundant in the western part of the state, but it has spread to all 88 counties, ...