Everyone knows that gardens are places to stroll and enjoy nature amidst trees and flowers that give pleasure and quiet, but today we're going to talk about a different kind of garden, completely different from the previous concept of gardens.
Nwick Poisons Park, located in Britain in the state of Illinois in Northumberland, is one of the largest public parks there. It is part of the Great Park attached to Castle Allonwick. It has been cut off from the Great Park by a wall that surrounds it from all sides, and a gate that is always closed because of the danger of the plants there.
The Allnook Castle, Britain's second largest castle, a historic castle built 900 years ago in Northumberland Province in the far northeast of England, is now a favorite tourist destination with 800,000 visitors a year.
Occupying a small fraction of the 162,000 square meters of total area of the Alumina Castle Park, the Toxic Botanical Garden has been called the Toxin Garden, as it contains a group of the most toxic and dangerous plants in the world, some of which are not to be eaten and some cannot be touched or even smelled.
The garden of toxins contains approximately 100 types of illicit drugs, including poppy, used in the manufacture together with the poisonous paddy plant (known as the killer eggplant), strychnos nux-vomica, or the nut poison used to extract estrechinin, as well as poisonous plants found in the park, such as esterkinin, coca, good-hearted and bad hemlocks. It is worth noting that coca leaf is extracted from the drug of cocaine, if one sheet or two of good feces are swallowed, which may cause death. The lees are so highly toxic that they use certain sources of political instincts, and even the criminals, who are believed to have been using the cancerin to kill. Socrates, the famous Greek philosopher, was probably executed for forcing him to drink the pachycara .
According to Yahoo.com, the poison park was recently added to the New York Gardens dating back to 1750. It was opened for the purpose of consolidating the tradition of caring for plants and toxic materials that England has been known for centuries. The slogan of the toxic garden is "No to drugs." The only goal of planting it is to educate the public, not harm them.
There is also a team of guides in the park to accompany visitors to introduce them to the poisonous plants and their uses and the extent of their danger. Also, the warning signs that read: No touching, no smelling, no cutting of plants were distributed in the park. Warning signs were placed at the entrance of the gates that read: "These plants are deadly." To ensure the safety of the public and to stop the thieves, the Observation Department in the park guards them and monitors them around the clock. An iron fence was built around some of the dangerous plants to avoid incidents of poisoning or stealing of plants for use in the manufacture of drugs.
The park has a long history and received great attention during the rule of the Duke of Northumberland, but it was neglected after the second world war, until the Duchess of Northumberland Yin Percy renovated and repaired the park after it moved to it in 1996, for the purpose of exposing the importance of plants and using them in the pharmaceutical industry, treating diseases, and introducing plants that kill or are used in the manufacture of drugs, through the park, and educating them on the harmful effects of drugs and on the contribution of botany science to the development of medicines. The duchess was inspired by a toxic garden near Padova, Italy, which was used by the Medici to kill their enemies.