Queen Anne's Lace (wild carrot) is often confused with its poisonous look-alike, Poison Hemlock. Here's how to tell them apart:
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK
Queen Anne's Lace is a medicinal wild plant with edible roots, flowers, leaves, + seeds
IDENTIFY WILD CARROT
Poison Hemlock is in the same family as Queen Anne's Lace, except it's
highly toxic
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK
Queen Anne’s lace has umbel shaped flowers that have lower bracts with three prongs
IDENTIFY WILD CARROT
Whereas, Poison Hemlock flowers grow in rounded clusters called compound umbels
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK
Queen Anne's Lace has a hairy stem & stalk
IDENTIFY WILD CARROT
Poison hemlock stems are hairless, hollow, and almost always have distinctive purplish-red splotching
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK
Queen Anne's Lace has leaves that smell of carrot + alternate, triangular in shape, with hairs like the stem
IDENTIFY WILD CARROT
Poison Hemlock leaves are opposite + compound, hairless, lacy, + triangular in shape. They
do not
smell like carrot
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK
Learn more with both of my identification guides:
IDENTIFY QUEEN ANNE'S LACE HERE
IDENTIFY POISON HEMLOCK HERE