- May 26, 2013
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They look like elderberry - but that is a bush and the berry grouping is different - as well as the leaves.
What you have there is called a chokecherry in Western PA - and they are fine for the birds to eat - very big pit inside - so that is why people don't do much with them - also very tart. But not poisonous at all. I actually planted some last spring that I got my parents to mail me - but they didn't take - I am trying again this fall. They don't flower as spectacular as a normal cherry - and again - more pit than flesh. But great for the animals and as diversity on the land - the more diverse - the more likelyhood that some edible will be successful in each year.
Oh NOTE - they are heavy in natural cyanide - so they shouldn't be scarffed up like a main meal - if that is all a chicken has to eat - they could die from the cyanide building up .... the leaves also have cyanide in them. So do apples, rice .... ect ..... so that is why I said not poisonous - but all things in balance! This COULD be toxic if used as an only source of food.
What you have there is called a chokecherry in Western PA - and they are fine for the birds to eat - very big pit inside - so that is why people don't do much with them - also very tart. But not poisonous at all. I actually planted some last spring that I got my parents to mail me - but they didn't take - I am trying again this fall. They don't flower as spectacular as a normal cherry - and again - more pit than flesh. But great for the animals and as diversity on the land - the more diverse - the more likelyhood that some edible will be successful in each year.
Oh NOTE - they are heavy in natural cyanide - so they shouldn't be scarffed up like a main meal - if that is all a chicken has to eat - they could die from the cyanide building up .... the leaves also have cyanide in them. So do apples, rice .... ect ..... so that is why I said not poisonous - but all things in balance! This COULD be toxic if used as an only source of food.
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