The Mythical Mistletoe - The Toxins Could Save Your Life!

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Published 2022-02-01
Mistletoe was considered a magical plant for ages. Science shows today that it has healing potential. Plus, it's a great Christmas plant with some fun traditions. As an ecologist though, I also see its role in the community as one of the most amazing things.

Thank you to Dr. David Watston ( twitter.com/D0CT0R_Dave ) and Dr. Rob Salguero-Gómez (twitter.com/Rob_SalGo) for their kindness and guidance in helping me understand why mistletoe are so amazingly cool! #SantalaceaeScience

▬ Contents of this video ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

0:00 - Common Christmas Mistletoe Mistake
0:20 - Mistletoe Introduction
1:48 - What is a Mistletoe
2:51 - Mistletoe Toxins
4:01 - Norse Legends
5:08 - Medicines from Mistletoe
6:27 - Is mistletoe Bad?
7:15 - How to get rid of Mistletoe
7:38 - Mistletoe Cross-section
8:31 - How to Plant Your Own Mistletoe
9:28 - Wrap

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All Comments (21)
  • Oh man, this is so cool. Thank you for this video. So-, I have prostate cancer. In combination with conventional treatment, through a functional care provider, I’ve used mistletoe extract. How this works is I would order the extract from Germany. It would be ordered in different strengths. The starting with the lowest strength, I would subconsciously inject 1 ml. The reaction was that of a mild flu, chills, fever, and dizziness, from about 1-2 hours. I would do this every other day, till no reactions, then up the dose. Then when my body got used to it, at the doctors office have an infusion of sodium ascorbate, and mistletoe extract. This program is used in Europe a lot. The coolest blood marker is raised levels of white blood cells, leukocytes. I don’t think it did much against the cancer, but how I felt was noticeable, quality of life improved. On investigation I found that ancient Europeans used mistletoe for many treatments, and remedies. Fascinating stuff.
  • There is a big clump on our oak tree directly above the mailbox. You would think that mistletoe, with it's 'kissy-kissy' reputation, would have some magical effect. But no; we still get bills in the mail.
  • @LRM135
    we had real mistletoe. I hung it from a ceiling light. forgot about for years. that light fixture did not have any bugs in it while the other 2 did. It repels bugs and spiders. who knew.
  • @ianstradian
    So I went for a walk in my local forest this morning at dawn, I watched the sunrise and listened to the world wake up, it was beautiful. But, I saw mistletoe I the trees and thoughts needed to look up a video about it when I had time... The spooky thing is,,, I never mentioned this out loud and this afternoon this video pops up in my YouTube feed, from a channel I have never watched..... Kinda freaked me out.
  • @janetross1900
    I live near Chicago and and when I was little, my parents would take us to see the special Christmas displays for kids at Marshall Fields and this is where we saw Santa to let him know what we wanted for Christmas. In their Christmas scenes they had little “people” (not live), and one was named Mr. Mistletoe. I was born in 1953 and as a young child, growing up during the Cold War and also not knowing what mistletoe was, I thought his character had little missiles for toes! I thought this was pretty strange but my Dad set me straight about it. It was also the first time I saw artificial snowflakes scattered around the display and picking them up and looking at them, I thought they were pretty weird. But then, back in those days, I was a pretty weird kid! I am 68 years old and I still remember the so vividly and I am still pretty weird😊
  • 👍 there’s so much in nature that deserves way more attention than they get from the scientific community. So many organisms that are labeled with terms like weed, poisonous, parasite, etc, give them a bad reputation, when there’s so much they can teach us!
  • @rennnnn914
    Fun facts, here in Australia we have a huge range of parasitical plants and none of our large range of mistletoes have any toxicity and they all have edible fruits.
  • @greglaroche1753
    Interesting video. I learned a lot. I live in France and have a herd of fifty goats. There is also a lot of mistletoe around and they often eat it and it doesn’t seem to effect them negatively. Granted, goats are not humans.
  • @GeckoAccount
    Interesting video. Although the norse legend referenced is incorrect. Loki is not a son of Odin, adoptive or otherwise. Loki is as old or older than Odin. He also swore a blood oath with Odin to become his blood brother in the past. But most of the other gods didn't like him. Odin's sons were the same. So Loki got a little cranky that the sons of his old friend didn't respect him. So cranky in fact that he fashioned an arrow from a mistletoe and tricked one of Odin's blind sons, to shoot Balder, the most popular of his kids, with the arrow. Which killed Balder. Loki is later found drinking, and while drunk mistakenly brags about it, which leads Odin to killing Loki's two sons, and using their innards to forge magical chains and using those chains, imprisons Loki in Niflheim. Where he is imprisoned, caustic poison drops towards him. Loki's wife pleads to be able to be by his side, out of respect towards Odin and Loki's former friendship. Odin Agrees. So, the wife stands beside Loki, using an urn, the wife would shield her husband's face and let the poison drip into that urn instead. However, eventually the urn will be full and would have to be emptied. So when she turned around to empty it, the poison would drop into Loki's face instead. The pain makes him twist and turn, stomping and shaking, roaring from the pain. This is the norse explanation of why there's earthquakes.
  • @karinmeyer6007
    Thank you for your contribution. I didn't know that misteltoe berries can be eaten by humnas ! In Morokko, in the biotope of the cedar forest of Cedrus atlanticus we have misteltoe with red berries! It is Viscum crusciatum and grows mostly on hawthorn. And in this biotope we have also the nice holly. So I have everything to decorate traditionally for the end of the year. I confirm that too much mistletoe dries out the host!
  • All I know, is that mistletoe was one of the most revered medicinal plant for millennia in Europe.
  • @gavinbolton9551
    Here are some facts I know!. There are actually two species of mistletoe in North America. The species you did not describe looks nothing like Phoradendron leucarpum it is much much smaller and lacks chlorophyll. Also there is some evidence that the mistletoe’s relationship is more mutualistic than previously thought. Lastly is seems that in a particular area mistletoes will only be found on one type of tree like one species of oak, but can still be found in other areas on different species. This might indicate genetic diversity despite only one recognized species.
  • @rule3036
    In my shire Mistletoe is absolutely everywhere, lots of old orchards and woodland, most of what you buy at Christmas comes from us or the next shire.
  • @NolanTyrrell
    West Australian Christmas bush grows on the roots of other trees. Australia has 90 species of mistletoe and the root ball is great for turning. The two woods look good together along with the grain structure.
  • @Ecotasia
    Mistletoe is so neat, down in Arizona the birds just love them
  • @bforman1300
    So, I've always heard European mistletoe has anticoagulant properties, which was why the tiny mistletoe dart was able to cause Baldur's death by blood loss. Also heard it was incorporated into Excalibur's scabbard for an additional advantage. Also that it was used as an abortifactant by precipitating menstruation. So. Does it have anticoagulant properties?
  • @injunsun
    @StoneAgeMan  In the version I heard, Loki didn't take advantage of a loophole, rather, Frigg had literally gone to every plant on Earth and asked for and received promises from them all that they would not harm Balder, but somehow she missed mistletoe, and Loki, who had been spying on her doings, knew this. He made a single arrow of it, and while the gods were having fun shooting arrows at Balder, because they would veer away, Loki gave his special arrow to a blind god, and steadied his aim for him. Literally, insult to injury. I'm not sure where I learned that version; possibly Edith Hamilton's "Mythology."
  • @rosseryn8216
    I live in TX. I started to question the mistletoe paradigm when I realized that our goats were climbing up in the trees and eating every bit of they could get to. Which was quite a bit until they got it. They loved it. Also the birds seemed to like it a lot.
  • I’ve eaten Mistletoe in England but not the seeds and yes it’s sweet but I found it difficult to swallow due to the stickiness of the fruit which just gets stuck as you swallow it.