>>>> It can cause light sensitivity on contact (as can buttercups). Our youngsters on the moor often get sunburned noses when they graze around it (they don't eat it).
I've never really noticed a connection. But then, our buttercup-y things (whatever they are) are only active in the spring (maybe mid April-early June) and we generally only have sunburn issues on our two pink-skinned horses in late June-August, when the sun is the strongest. Maybe what we have here aren't the same species though. Karen Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
