No, thunderwood is a regional Southern name for poison sumac, which can grow to a tall shrub/tree as high as 25 feet. The name was given for the intense pain and burning caused by contact with the foliage or sap.
Burning poison oak (or poison ivy or poison sumac) can release the urushiol, which is the oily substance in poison oak that many (but not all) people have strong reactions to. Worse, the urushiol will be carried in the smoke from the fire, and it will get into the lungs of anyone who breathes in the smoke. If you think that having poison oak on your arms and legs is bad, just imagine having that poison oak reaction on the inside of your lungs.Bottom line: do not ever burn poison oak.
No. Poison oak is not a tree, but a vine. Oak trees grow from acorns.
sumac
Urushiol
Yes. I've gotten a poison oak rash from exposure in Michigan and New Jersey.
Not a good idea. Some varieties of sumac contain the same toxic chemical as poison oak.
NO!
Burning poison oak (or poison ivy or poison sumac) can release the urushiol, which is the oily substance in poison oak that many (but not all) people have strong reactions to. Worse, the urushiol will be carried in the smoke from the fire, and it will get into the lungs of anyone who breathes in the smoke. If you think that having poison oak on your arms and legs is bad, just imagine having that poison oak reaction on the inside of your lungs.Bottom line: do not ever burn poison oak.
Thunder Oak was created in 1997.
poison oak has five leaves....i think
Thunder Oak has 289 pages.
If the poison ivy bubble is big it is not poison ivy but rather poison oak the same remities apply for ridding yourself of it
No. Poison Oak is a different species than oak trees. Poison Oak is a shrub with leaves that look similar to an oak trees.
The ISBN of Thunder Oak is 0-552-54546-5.
No. Poison oak is not a tree, but a vine. Oak trees grow from acorns.
Poison oak is a green plant, not a bacteria or virus.
nothing really