Are you serious ? In certain parts of uk where this plant grows it adds to the environment, not detracts. A pretty plant that is easy to remove is preferable to the crap it allegedly crowds out ie, fern, bramble, docks, nettles and bindweed, all of which are more invasive and extremely difficult to eradicate
Are you talking about the nettles, brambles, and ferns, and bindweeds native to the UK? Because being inconvenient for humans who want to turn the land into pastures or exotic gardens doesn’t make them invasive. They are part of the native ecosystem and may be aggressive, but you not appreciating them doesn’t make them invasive.
@@me-ye6ld nettles were brought here by the Romans, built us long straight roads but the picnic areas full of stingers. I was talking about the general aesthetics of the relative plants not so much about invasiveness.
That's what brush fires are for
These have to be related to our (US) native Jewel Weed and Touch Me Nots.
This plant reminds me of Islam.
Touch it and it explodes?
Are you serious ? In certain parts of uk where this plant grows it adds to the environment, not detracts. A pretty plant that is easy to remove is preferable to the crap it allegedly crowds out ie, fern, bramble, docks, nettles and bindweed, all of which are more invasive and extremely difficult to eradicate
Are you talking about the nettles, brambles, and ferns, and bindweeds native to the UK? Because being inconvenient for humans who want to turn the land into pastures or exotic gardens doesn’t make them invasive. They are part of the native ecosystem and may be aggressive, but you not appreciating them doesn’t make them invasive.
@@me-ye6ld nettles were brought here by the Romans, built us long straight roads but the picnic areas full of stingers. I was talking about the general aesthetics of the relative plants not so much about invasiveness.
@@evaflowervines9520 nettles and brambles are superfoods. Just pick them and eat them.