pokeweed/inkberry is so invasive that I yank it immediately upon seeing it anyway.
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Thank you for the info! I'm new to chickens. Raising my first flock since last April so I am still learning a lot.Some plants are poisonous in large quantities only (not an issue if the chickens are eating little bits).
Some plants have poisonous parts but other parts are safe (example: potato leaves are poisonous, but the actual potatoes are fine so long as they are not green.)
Some parts are poisonous, but the chickens would not really eat them anyway (example: avocado pits, which are too large for a chicken to swallow and generally cannot be opened or broken up by chickens.)
But many such things end up on "do not feed" lists, even when they are not really a problem. (The authors of those lists seem to use logic like this: "Potato leaves are toxic, and green potatoes are toxic-- so we'll tell people to avoid all potatoes, even though most potatoes available to most people are just fine.")
You would need to be more careful if you intended to grind something up and mix large amounts into the chickens' main food, but when chickens are just allowed access to things and can choose for themselves whether to eat it, they usually do a good job of eating safe things and avoiding problems.