
Wild Black Cherry (photo: Ohio Extension)

Pin Cherry

Back "pasture" is beyond the far fence... it's essentially a Pin Cherry orchard right now.
Cyanide blocks the body’s ability to use oxygen at the cellular level (the name derrives from cyan, referencing the blue tinge that can occur in tissue without oxygen-enriched hemoglobin). In most animals, symptoms appear soon after ingestion and start with the body’s physiological response as it attempts to get more oxygen – rapid and labored breathing, anxiety, and stress. If a fatal dose has been ingested, respiratory and/or cardiac arrest will normally occur within a few minutes to an hour. First aid exists in the form of a cyanide antidote; however, as it must be given intravenously within a few minutes of the onset of symptoms, it is usually not an available and/or practical treatment (click here for a more extensive discussion on this from the Purdue extension office).
For that reason, prevention is the best cure for cherry poisoning. We’ve been busy removing cherry trees from areas to which our livestock have access. In addition, it’s a good idea to check the margins of fields/runouts/pastures after storms, frosts, and/or droughts to collect fallen, branches, and leaves before allowing livestock to graze.
On the plus side, these toxic compounds are concentrated in the leaves and bark, and the fruit itself is edible. Black cherries can be sweet (watch out for the pit) for eating or processing. Pin cherries, on the other hand, are quite sour and are best in a sweetened jam or to add tartness to sweet recipes.
Black Cherry wood is also prized for woodworking, though again, Pin Cherry falls short here. Not only are large diameter specimens rare, but my woodworking friends tell me it is prone to splitting. However, we’ve found several uses for the copious amounts of wood, and much of what is too small to be good for firewood is in a separate stack to be used for smoking meat next year. In addition, we’ve been burning all the slash too small for either purpose to use for ash to bring down the acidity and bring up the potassium levels in our fields.
MORE REFERENCES:
Posted by Occupy Movement hits the Flying T « The Flying T Ranch Blog on October 25, 2011 at 8:51 pm
[…] Can we get a horse? « Poison in the Pasture – Pin Cherry […]
Posted by Auburn Meadow Farm on October 27, 2011 at 7:22 am
Nice post! I also was thinking that the Occupy Movement was disappointingly becoming another exercise in labeling people. Love the percentages data…
Posted by Another Rock in the Wall « The Flying T Ranch Blog on November 18, 2011 at 4:28 pm
[…] is about 1.25 acres and “rough” to say the least. Based on the size of the poisonous pin cherries throughout the pasture, we figure the pasture has been let go for a good 5-10 years. We’d […]
Posted by Clearing the Land « The Flying T Ranch Blog on June 14, 2012 at 9:39 pm
[…] it’s really rough. Half-forested, largely with poisonous [to livestock] pin cherry trees. Not much growing in it but rocks and goldenrod. Fence falling down. Steep slopes on a […]
Posted by pstpierre on August 29, 2012 at 5:42 pm
Thanks for liking my post.
I learned a lot about the different trees you described. New Hampshire is great isn’t it!!