From the monthly archives:

September 2009

More of the Poodle Dog Bush

by Lorraine on September 11, 2009

Here’s a copy of the article that was run in the Orange County Register newspaper.   It’s short and interesting and this is the first time that I’ve seen anyone discuss it.

Flower danger: ‘If you touch it, it’s going to get you’

Purple-flowered poodle-dog bush, growing in burn areas, is hazard to humans.

By EUGENE W. FIELDS

THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Comments 17| Recommend 23

A pretty purple-flowered bush blooming on the hills of the burned areas in Santiago and Modjeska canyons is a danger to people, according to the Department of Forestry.

The flower, commonly known as poodle-dog bush, is an irritant akin to poison oak, said forester Eric Oldar.

“This time of the year, the floral stalk is brilliant and it’s very attractive, especially along hiking trails or roads where people make a stop,” Oldar said. “They’ll go out and actually pick it and take it home as a flower arrangement, not knowing that contact, for the vast majority of the public, will cause a poison oak reaction.”

Symptoms range from itching to a rash or blisters lasting as long as two weeks. George Ewan with the Orange County Fire Authority said the pain is reminiscent to coming in contact with stinging nettles.

“It’s like that that except it doesn’t wear off,” Ewan said. “It goes for quite a while.”

Oldar said the bush is typically dormant, but bloomed as a result of the Santiago Canyon fire in October.

“It becomes prevalent after a major disturbance like fire or something that takes the area back to the barren ground,” Oldar said. “It will blossom, grow, and eventually be replaced by other dominant vegetation until another disturbance occurs.”

Oldar said the prevalence period could last as long as a decade, which is one of the reasons his department is trying to get the word out about the bush. Another reason is because of the attractiveness of the flower.

“This time of year, it can be a greater attracting to the public,” he said. “Later in the season, the flowers drop and the shrub will continue to exist, but it has no particular characteristic that would cause the public to come in contact with it.”

Oldar said people should go to their doctor if they start to itch. An over-the-counter remedy is calamine lotion or anything that has a cortisone derivative.

Ewan said avoidance is the best remedy.

“If you’re going to go out into the foothills or into the burn area, be careful,” he said. “There’s a cute little flower out there that’s purple and if you touch it, it’s going to get you.”

Contact the writer: 714-704-3704 or efields@ocregister.com

{ 0 comments }

Poodle Dog Bush

by Lorraine on September 10, 2009

Funny name, huh?   And the sweet looking plant doesn’t even look remotely like any kind of dog, let alone a Poodle.   I’m wondering if it was named after it’s attitude.   Some of those smaller dogs can be quite “aggressive” and not too friendly.  I guess they have to make up for their lack of size….

I don’t mean to offend anyone that has a small Poodle, they are cute.   But this plant isn’t.   In all of the years that I’ve been hiking, I had never heard of it and I certainly had never seen one before.   But last year I had my first opportunity to hear about it and observe it out in the field.

Poodle Dog Bush

Poodle Dog Bush

It’s pretty isn’t it?  And it just wants you to to lean over and inhale from it’s colorful flowers and touch them and maybe even pick a few.

Don’t even think about it and you don’t want to be sticking your face in it, either.   Within a few hours if not a day, your eyes will be swollen shut and depending on what part of the rest of your anatomy has touched it, it will be suffering as well.

"Come and breath in my lovely fragrance!"

This plant appears in areas where there has been a brush fire and are being more frequently seen  now than they were in the past.   These photos were taken in the Johnson Ridge area of the Los Padres National Forest and they appeared for the first time last year following  the Day Fire.  They have grown larger since then ( As much as 3-4 feet tall) and I have encountered people who mistakenly touched them and paid the price.

Now some people aren’t sensitive to Poison Oak and maybe this plant won’t bother them either.  But I certainly wouldn’t be taking any chances with it when I come across it and I make sure to avoid touching it. 

There was a recent article in an Orange county newspaper that I will post here tomorrow if anyone would like to read it.   But if you do any hiking or biking in areas that have burned in the last year or two, watch out for these villains so that you can avoid getting yourself into a painful predicament.

And sorry, but I can’t find the botanical name for this plant but I’m sure that someone will let me know what it is.

{ 1 comment }