Live In Los Gatos
Blog by Mary Pope-Handy
Los Gatos, California
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Live In Los Gatos
May. 5, 2007
Categorized in: Visiting Los Gatos
But please be careful. Everything is very, very green this time of year. The grass and live oaks and scrub all tangle together with thistles and berries and vines. Among them, blending in just perfectly, is poison oak. I've been really lucky in my life: I've never been snared by this itch-inducing plant. But my older brother, Steve, used to chase after golf balls into the rough at Pasatiempo and often came back with much more than a ball or two. He would become terribly swollen up, each occurance worse than the one before. The Calomine Lotion was slathered on generously and dried into a crusty nastiness that I will never forget. He looked awful, and felt worse. My better half, Jim, is a volunteer Parks Commissioner for the town of Los Gatos and he spends a great deal of time in parks. On Sunday we went through Belgatos (again) and this time, Jim taught me how to identify poison oak. I'd always heard Immediately prior to my lesson in identifying poison oak, I allowed Bella, our dog, too close to the stuff and he hollared, "don't you see the poison oak?" Apparently I was tempting fate and Jim realized I was clueless. He made sure, right then and there, that I got a lesson in how to recognize it. (Our vet has confirmed that dogs can, and do, carry the poison oak plant oils home, an amazing way to infect everyone quickly. Jim pictured our pooch spreading it to every member of the family.) What I then noticed was most cruel: the poison oak was interwoven with wild blackberry bushes on the creek banks. Talk about a tease. Now I know what to look for. I want you to be equally well armed. Have a good, long study of these photos and make sure you don't ever get too close to a plant that looks like this - no matter how many berries beckon you, no matter how delicious that water looks on a warm day. It's not worth it. Ask my brother. |
