Stem is also speckled purple and round, whereas cow parsley is triangular and green gradient into purple. The latter is supposed to have a sweeter smell too.Could be cow parsley, or some other umbelliferous plant- if it's not growing near water it is unlikely to be hemlock. If it is near a watercourse/marshy land, check how it smells when crushed. Hemlock is supposed to smell of mice.
^^^ Yeaph, this is what I'm thinking.can you get a photo of the stem? Thats usually more telling than leaves for this family of plants
Like a mouse cage, but really only the mature plants, and more noticeable when it's hot. Horses can as a rule tell the difference between it and CP at a thousand paces.It's interesting that the give away for Hemlock is its sploshly pink stems. I didn't even notice them when I was looking at it. But there they are in the photo, clear as day, and the next time I walk in the area where they are growing, I'll have a look at the stems IRL.
I'm also planning to have a sniff at the crushed up leaves but I'm a little chicken to risk it, knowing how dangerous this plant is. I want to know if it smells like mice - or a mouse cage, which is quite different.
Ah, then I might not bother to have a scary sniff. I've cleaned a lot of mice cages in my time.Like a mouse cage, but really only the mature plants, and more noticeable when it's hot. Horses can as a rule tell the difference between it and CP at a thousand paces.
Neither of those leaves are like the OPsnope, hence the need for the missing info
View attachment 169543
Oh I absolutely wouldn't trust it just based on that.Please, please do not trust Google lens or AI for the identification of plants. Especially potentially lethal ones. Lighting, background and the like can all change what it suggests and it really can't be trusted