Pubdate: Mon, 14 Aug 2006 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Alexandra Paul AVOID THE JIMSON, TEEN TELLS PEERS High Led To Frightening Stay In Hospital A teenager who ended up on a respirator in a hospital bed after getting high on an hallucinogenic plant known as jimson weed is urging other teenagers not to do what he did. "I want other kids to realize this is a plant that is not be fooled around with," Cory Johnson, 16, said yesterday. "I knew there could be side effects, like hallucinating. I didn't know it could affect your hearing, your respiration or that it could make you blind," the chastened teen said. Last Tuesday, Johnson ate seven bulbs each filled with hundreds of seeds from an ornamental plant called datura -- also known as devil's trumpet, devil's apple and jimson weed. It's a plant that grows a metre or more high, with big trumpet-like flowers, an intoxicating scent and a reputation for even a few seeds being a toxic hallucinogen. Johnson and seven other chums including his girlfriend were trying to get high on the potent seeds. Johnson said his girlfriend landed in hospital with him for a day. Another two chums sought out medical advice after seeing what happened to him, the boy said. "I took it Monday and Tuesday and on Tuesday I OD'd. I blacked out and I woke up strapped to a bed in hospital," Johnson said. For the next two days Johnson was on a respirator that breathed for him because he couldn't breath on his own. And he was blind for a day and a half, he said. He was the only one of the group to become critically ill. Datura is a plant with centuries of history, according to entries on Internet websites that pop up with any browser search. A member of the nightshade family, datura's poisonous reputation is so much a part of the world's history that literary greats from the Greek poet Homer to the Bard himself have written about it. "People did warn me," Johnson said. He looked up the plant on the Internet. And Johnson admitted he knew he was chewing way more than he needed to get high. A few seeds are enough to create a sense of euphoria. The near brush spooked his mother, too. Debbie Dutka wants the plant removed anywhere it grows in the city even though she said her son must shoulder the blame for seeking out the deadly high. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath