tall) than the others. The leaves of Queen Anne's lace are smaller and and bipinnate. The leaflets are deeply lobed (pinnatifid). Cow parsley has ...
Contact with cow parsnip may cause skin irritation, blistering rashes and skin
Queen Anne's lace (wild carrot), common hogweed, cow parsnip, cow
The alternative name for cow parsley is Queen Anne's lace. This harks back to a folk tale that the flowers would bloom for Queen Anne and her ladies in waiting ...
This is cow parsley, a member of the umbelliferae or carrot family; and
wide blooms and can grow up to 20 feet (6 m.) tall. Cow parsnip growing conditions are similar to this plant, but its cousins, Queen Anne's lace ...
The Wild Garden: Hansen's Northwest Native Plant Database. Identification: Cow parsnip vs. Queen Anne's lace (invasive ) and poisonous Hemlock species.
and hogweed. It is often confused with Daucus carota which is known as Queen Anne's lace or wild carrot, also a member of the Apiaceae.
Cow parsley AKA Wild chervil, and sometimes referred to as Queen Anne's Lace, though several plants in the apiaceae family get this name, ...
and cow parsnip, angelica, wild parsnip, Queen Anne's lace, and poison hemlock.