Plants come in all forms and shapes. Some are beautiful, other ugly. Some smell nice, some smell pretty disgusting. Some plants we put in our houses, others are very dangerous for humans. Most we consider ‘normal’, but some plants are really weird. We present to you the 7 weirdest plant facts:

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Himalayan Blackberry: Slasher of the Plant World

While this plant may sound like a very Zen and fancy smartphone it is in fact a rather lethal thorn factory. Boasting lethal inch-long thorns, the sturdy but whippy branches all tangle together and grow under tension. This results in the branches whipping forward violently when released, slashing into any unwary passers-by causing deep lacerations and severe injuries, especially to unprotected faces and hands. The plant is very invasive and rapidly takes over any area in which it takes root, each plant growing to cover half an acre – an impossible barrier to pass through unscathed.

Himalayan Blackberry: Slasher of the Plant World

Angel Trumpet: Zombie Maker!

This is a beautiful name for a beautiful plant, but one that contains a positive cocktail of potent chemicals and toxins. While some are harvested for medicinal use: atropine hyoscyamine there is another drug that can be derived from the pale and elegant lily-shaped flower – scopolamine. Known as the ‘zombie drug’ scopolamine makes the mind of those ingesting it very susceptible to influence and has also been used  as a truth serum by the Russian security forces, although not for long due to unwanted side effects. It has also been used as a date-rape drug and in order to incapacitate victims in order to mug them. There are some incidents of people taking the drug voluntarily as a hallucinogenic, but these are few and far between as the side effects can be awful.

Angel Trumpet: Zombie Maker!

Kings Holly: Doing it For Himself?

The King’s Holly can technically be said to be one of the world’s oldest living organisms. While each plant is thought to live to around 300 years old, the way the plant propagates itself is unique. Instead of breeding as other plants do, the King’s Holly simply drops a leaf, which sprouts roots and becomes a tree all by itself. Reproduction by this method is cloning and the DNA of each tree matches that of samples from 43,600 years ago – making a case for the entire plant claiming to be that great age. The downside of this unique method of reproduction is that the plant is unlikely to be able to develop any defence in the event that a disease strikes…

Kings Holly: Doing it For Himself?

Giant Hogweed: Vampire Plant

Giant Hogweed looks like an alien plant, standing up to 5.5 metres tall with immense leaves and flowers. Its bizarre appearance should serve as a warning to the unwary as it is full of a photo-sensitive and toxic sap which causes the skin to blister and swell painfully, leaving behind permanent disfiguring scars. This effect is dramatically worsened by the sap-laden skin being exposed to sunlight. The reaction starts with itching and reddening, gradually worsening over the next 48 hours and can become so severe that hospitalisation can become necessary. If even a small amount of the sap comes into contact with the eyes, permanent blindness can result.

Giant Hogweed: Vampire Plant

Pando Tree

Apparently a smallish and fairly non-descript forest of trembling aspens, the Pando tree is actually all one immense plant – a male, in case you are interested! The ‘trees’ in the forest are actually off-shoots of the main shared root system. The entire plant is estimated to weigh a hefty 6,000,000 kilograms and the plant is thought to be about 80,000 years old, making it one of the world’s oldest living organisms.

Pando Tree

Strangler Fig

Strangler Fig – Angkor Wat This sinisterly named plant grows up around an existing tree, slowly covering the entire plant. Then it proceeds to tighten its grip on the host tree until it dies, literally strangled to death by the parasite plant. Sometimes the fig is so strong by the time the host tree dies that it remains in position around a hollow space where the tree used to be.

Strangler Fig

Giant Water Lilies

There are few children who have not seen at least one picture of a rather grumpy looking toddler standing or sitting on an immense lily pad – and promptly longed to do the same. Victoria Amazonica can grow leaves of up to 8 foot across and even the flowers are not small, each one measuring about 40 centimetres in diameter!

Giant Water Lilies