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Friday, May 16, 2025

The Poinsettia and Christmas

by

20111210

You can find a poin­set­tia's scar­let, star-shaped leaves every­where you turn dur­ing the hol­i­days.Poin­set­tias are one of the most pop­u­lar Christ­mas dec­o­ra­tions around. But how did this plant from the Mex­i­can coun­try­side be­come a botan­i­cal sta­ple in our sea­son of giv­ing? And is there any truth to the be­lief that munch­ing on one of its leaves could be fa­tal?Poin­set­tias (Eu­phor­bia Pul­cher­ri­ma) have a rich cul­tur­al his­to­ry. The trop­i­cal shrubs, which have about 100 dif­fer­ent species and reach heights of up to 12 feet tall in their nat­ur­al habi­tat, were known as "Cuet­lax­o­chitl" to the Aztecs and used to dye cloth­ing and cure fevers.Poin­set­tias were al­so used in Aztec re­li­gious cer­e­monies since the Aztecs con­sid­ered the col­or red a sym­bol of pu­ri­ty.Many mis­take the poin­set­tia's leaves as flower petals, but the flow­ers are ac­tu­al­ly the small­er, yel­low buds in a poin­set­tia's cen­ter. These bracts-the up­per por­tion of the leaves-are fa­mous­ly red, al­though they ac­tu­al­ly bloom in a va­ri­ety of hues, such as pink, white and yel­low. Poin­set­tias, al­so known as the "lob­ster flower" or "Mex­i­can flame leaf," bloom in De­cem­ber, mak­ing them an ide­al hol­i­day flower.

His­to­ry of the Poin­set­tia

Poin­set­tias are named for the first US am­bas­sador to Mex­i­co, Dr Joel Roberts Poin­sett, who in­tro­duced Amer­i­ca to the poin­set­tia in 1828, af­ter dis­cov­er­ing it in the wilder­ness in south­ern Mex­i­co. Dr Poin­sett, who dab­bled in botany when he wasn't pol­i­tick­ing be­tween na­tions, sent cut­tings of the plant back to his South Car­oli­na home. While it wasn't ini­tial­ly em­braced, its caught on over the years, and by the 20th cen­tu­ry it was a hol­i­day main­stay.So what does a poin­set­tia have to do with Christ­mas? One in­ter­pre­ta­tion of the plant is as a sym­bol of the Star of Beth­le­hem, the heav­en­ly body that led the three ma­gi, or wise men, to the place where Christ was born. A Mex­i­can leg­end tells of a girl who could on­ly of­fer weeds as a gift to Je­sus on Christ­mas Eve. When she brought the weeds in­to a church, they blos­somed in­to the beau­ti­ful red plants we know as poin­set­tias, known as Flo­res de Noche Bue­na in Mex­i­co (Span­ish for "flow­ers of the holy night.")A com­mon myth that has ex­ist­ed for gen­er­a­tions is that a poin­set­tia's leaves are poi­so­nous. Al­though it's prob­a­bly not a good idea to have a com­pet­i­tive-eat­ing con­test with poin­set­tia bracts since they could cause di­ar­rhea, re­search has shown that a child could con­sume as many as 500 poin­set­tia bracts with­out any tox­ic ef­fects. A tot who ac­ci­den­tal­ly nib­bles on a leaf may not feel well, but the con­se­quences won't be fa­tal. (TLC)


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