10. Narcissus
These cheerful yellow and white harbingers of spring, aka daffodils and jonquils, are actually mildly toxic if the bulbs are eaten in large quantities (Narcissus pseudonarcissus is shown). 
Some people confuse them for onions.  Daffodil bulb diners tend to experience nausea, vomiting, cramps and  diarrhea. A doctor might recommend intravenous hydration and/or drugs to  stave off nausea and vomiting if symptoms are severe or the patient is a  child.
9. Rhododendron
 
 Rhododendrons and azalea bushes (a variety of rhododendron), with their bell-shaped flowers, look great in the yard come springtime, but the leaves are toxic and so is honey made from the flower nectar.
Eating either from these evergreen shrubs makes your mouth burn , and then you'll probably experienced increased salivation, vomiting, diarrhea and a tingling sensation in the skin. Headaches, weak muscles and dim vision could follow.
Your heart rate could slow down or beat strangely, and you might even drop into a coma and undergo fatal convulsions. Before that, doctors will try to replace your fluids and help you breath more easily and administer drugs to bring back your normal heart rhythm.
8. Ficus
Also  known as weeping fig, benjamin tree, or small-leaved rubber  plants,  all ficus have milky sap in their leaves and stems that is  toxic. 
There are about 800 species of ficus trees, shrubs and vines (Ficus benjamina  is shown), many of which are cultivated indoors in pots and tubs and  outdoors in warm areas where some varieties can grow to up to 75 feet  tall.
 The worst that will happen is your skin will itch and puff up and your doctor will give you something for the allergy or the inflammation.
7. Oleander
Every bit of the oleander plant is toxic, unlike the case for other plants where just the flower or sap might be poisonous. 
Even accidental inhalation of the smoke  from burning oleander is a problem. Other trouble comes from using the  sticks for weenie or marshmallow roasts or drinking water in which the  clusters of red, pink or white flowers have been placed. 
These evergreen shrubs (Nerium oleander  is shown) are common as tub plants or in gardens in the Southwest and  California, any locale that approaches the plant's native Mediterranean climate.  
Typically  the symptoms involve a change in heart rate, be it a slow down or  palpitations or high potassium levels. A doctor might prescribe a drug  to bring your heartbeat back under control and try to induce vomiting  with ipecac, pump your stomach or absorb the toxin with ingested  charcoal.
6. Chrysanthemum
Also  known as mums, orange and yellow varieties of these showy flowers often  turn up in foil-wrapped pots on people's front steps around Halloween and Thanksgiving.  
There are 100 to 200 species of Chrysanthemums, and they generally grow  low to the ground, but can turn into shrubs. 
Gardeners plant mums to  keep rabbits away. Guess what? The flower heads are somewhat toxic to humans too.  But not terribly. 
Touching  them can make you itch and puff up a bit, but probably the doctor will  just give you something for the inflammation and allergic reaction.
5. Anthurium
The  leaves and stems of these bizarre-looking plants, with dark green,  heart-shaped leathery leaves and a scarlet, white  or green spike  surrounded by a red, pink or white "spathe," are toxic.  
Also known as flamingo flowers or pigtail plants, eating tropical Anthuriums could give you a painful burning sensation in the mouth that then swells and blisters. 
Your voice might also become hoarse and strained and you might have difficulty swallowing. Most of this will fade with time, but cool liquids, pain pills and gluey herbs and foods like licorice or flaxseeds may bring relief.
4. Lily-of-the-valley
These  darling droopers, also known as mayflowers, are entirely poisonous,  from the tips of their tiny bell-shaped white flowers that coyly fall  off like parted hair to the very water in which they might be placed. 
A  little bit of Lily-of-the-valley (Convallaria majalis) probably won't hurt much, but if you eat a lot, you'll probably experience    nausea, vomiting, pain in the mouth, abdominal pain, diarrhea and cramps. Your heart rate might also become slow or irregular. 
A doctor might decide to clean out your stomach by pumping it or feeding you absorbing charcoal, and might give you drugs to bring your heart rate back to normal.
3. Hydrangea
These poofy-flowered bushes (Hydrangea macrophylla)  are popular yard ornaments that can grow up to 15 feet tall with rose,  deep blue or greenish-white flowers that grow in huge clusters and look  as edible as cotton candy or a big bun to an imaginative mind. But those  blooms will give you a belly ache that sets in sometimes hours after eaten. 
Typically, patients also experience itchy skin, vomiting, weakness and sweating. Some reports indicate that patients can even experience coma, convulsions and a breakdown  in the body's blood circulation. 
Luckily, there is an antidote for  hydrangea poisoning, and doctors might also give you drugs to address  to ease your symptoms.
2. Foxglove
Foxglove  is a magical looking plant that grows to 3 feet tall with drooping  purple, pink or white flowers, sometimes dotted inside, along a central  stalk. 
Its Latin name is Digitalis purpurea, which might sound familiar; leaves from the plant are a commercial source of the heart drug digitalis. 
If you eat any part of these plants in the wild, you too will likely have heart problems after a spell of nausea, vomiting, cramps, diarrhea and pain in the  mouth.
  A doctor might administer charcoal to absorb the toxin or pump your  stomach, and might also administer drugs to bring your heart rate back  to normal. Other names for this plant include fairy bells, rabbit  flower, throatwort and witches' thimbles.
1. Wisteria
Wisterias form romantic cascades of sweetpea-like flowers that fall in lush blue, pink or white masses from woody vines that grow  mainly in the South and Southwest. 
The  entire plant, also known as a kidney bean tree, is toxic, though some  say the flowers are not. Better safe than sorry, because most reports  are that eating this plant will cause nausea, vomiting, cramps and diarrhea that could require treatments such as intravenous hydration and anti-nausea pills.









 
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