358 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS 



after having eaten it. It usually takes them about a week to recover, during which time 

 they are unfit for work, and especially so during the first three days." 



Captain Kingsbury, of the Sixth United States cavalry, under date of March, 1890, 

 wrote me from Fort Stanton that the sleepy grass affected nearly all his horses at two 

 camping places, it was hard work to make them walk. 



The similarity of symptoms, whether observed in Coahuila or in New Mexico, is 

 certainly remarkable, and furnishes strong evidence of the substantial accuracy of the 

 observations as reported. It would seem, then, reasonably established that this plant 

 possesses narcotic or sedative properties, affecting principally horses, but also cattle and 

 probably other animals; that animals are not fond of it but eat it inadvertently or when 

 under stress of hunger; that cases of poisoning occur especially in the spring, when the 

 radicle and lower blades first come up, and that the active principle resides in these 

 blades, and perhaps only during that season. 



8. Avena, L.,Oats 



Annual or perennial grasses, usually with flat leaves and panicled spikelets; 

 spikelets 2, many-flowered, or rarely 1 -flowered; lower flowers perfect, the up- 

 per staminate or imperfect; empty glume unequal, membranaceous and per- 



1) 



Fig. 148. Wild Oats (Arena fatua). a. 

 empty glumes; b, flowering glumes. (U. S. Dept. 

 Agrl.). 



