
The nine ‘criminal' garden plants that could get you in trouble with the police and leave you with a £5,000 fine
Read on for gardening jobs to get done by the end of next week
PLANT PALAVER The nine 'criminal' garden plants that could get you in trouble with the police and leave you with a £5,000 fine
THE sun is out and many of us are making the most of it in our gardens.
But instead of sitting on your lounger, you may want to focus your attention on the plants growing in your garden to prevent a hefty fine.
9
These plants could cost you thousands of pounds
Credit: Getty
While they may look innocent, there are several plants wreaking havoc in UK gardens, and if you're not careful, it could lead to structural damage, wildlife damage and paying out fines.
Gardening experts at Fantastic Gardeners say these plants are more than just annoying weeds, they can takeover wildlife, cause burns and some are under strict regulation laws in the UK.
'These plants tend to spread vigorously, making their control costly and difficult,' they warned.
Here, we take a look at the plants you need to check are in your garden to prevent penalties of up to £5,000 or two years in jail according to the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.
Spear Thistle
This purple plant may look lovely but is highly invasive and poses a huge threat to other UK native species.
Spear thistle is a troublesome weed because, upon germination, it produces a tap root with lateral roots that spread horizontally.
According to Fantastic Gardeners, it's incredibly adaptable and can compete with almost every plant it comes across so if you see it in the garden, it's time to get your gloves on.
Broad-Leaved Dock
This green, leafy plant may look harmless but is also highly invasive and can bring a huge range of unwanted garden pests, according to the Mirror.
Broad-leaved dock thrives in all soil types, with 'no climatic limitation' stopping it from spreading throughout the UK.
9
The Dock plant can bring unwanted pests
Credit: Getty
Common Ragwort
The pretty yellow flowers might deceive you, but this is one of the most commonly reported weeds across the country.
This weed is toxic to mammals and its growth should be strictly controlled to protect livestock.
9
These pretty flowers are toxic to animals
Credit: Alamy
Map reveals worst areas for Japanese knotweed with fears plant will wipe thousands off house prices
Curled Dock
Similar to Broad-leaved dock, this is a resilient and persistent weed.
Both curled dock and broad-leaved dock are regulated under the Weeds Act of 1959.
9
The curled dock is also considered an invasive plant
Credit: Getty
Japanese Knotweed
This invasive plant is one of the most well-known in the UK.
The Japanese Knotweed can grow almost anywhere and can cause serious issues for homeowners.
Knotweed can take years to completely eradicate and often costs over £10,000 to remove professionally.
9
Japanese Knotweed can cost thousands to remove
Credit: Getty
Rhododendron Ponticum
While this plant has beautiful purple blooms making it an attractive addition to the garden, you need to be careful
This plant towers over others and prevents sunlight from reaching them.
In fact, the UK spends millions each year trying to eradicate it, and it's far from easy to control.
9
This plant prevents others from growing
Credit: Getty - Contributor
May gardening jobs
The Sun's Gardening Editor, Veronica Lorraine, has shared the tasks you need to crack on with in May.
GARDEN growth can go from nought to ninety in May, depending on the weather. The last UK frosts are generally seen at the beginning of the month, so all of a sudden there's so much more to do and grow.
Plant out dahlia tubers
It's a joy to finally plant out your dahlia tubers. Remember how big they can get - and space accordingly - anything up to half a metre apart.
It's a good idea to put your support stakes in now instead of trying to work around them.
And make sure you include lots of well rotted manure or decent compost to feed it and then mulch to keep it moist and suppress weeds. They generally start blooming in July.
Final feed to Spring flowers
You can give a cheeky feed to all your remaining tulips and daffodils.
Although the majority of bulbs aren't guaranteed to come back year after year any more, as long as you've left them to die back naturally there's a good chance they'll have stored enough energy to come back again. Tomato feed is fine.
Tie up climbers
Your clematis, honeysuckle and rambling roses should be well on their way by now - try to use plastic free string to tie them back into their support, or tuck them round each other to make sure they don't sprout off in crazy directions.
Feed the lawn
It's not too late to give your lawn a good feed.
Whether you use granular or liquid, it can give it a good boost to see it through the harsher summer months.
While mowing, don't go too low with your cut length yet and never take more than a third off the grass height.
Get creative
It's also time to get creative with hanging baskets and pots.
Trailing pelargoniums, which a lot of people call geraniums, and Begonias are a good, low cost way of getting lovely returning blooms throughout the summer in your baskets.
And pots can be planted with spring bulbs.
Don't forget the greenhouse!
Give your greenhouse a good tidy and clean the glass inside and out.
The improved light will help plants grow quicker inside and tidying is good for the soul.
You can just use a household white wine vinegar and water solution - or even neat if you're feeling spendy - which gives a really good shine.
Himalayan Balsam
Another pretty plant that is a total menace to UK wildlife is the Himalayan Balsam.
It spreads easily through animals, wind and rivers, and this fast-growing species is hard to contain once it takes off.
Each plant can produce around 800 seeds, with pods that can launch them up to 22 feet away from the original site.
9
This weed can travel quickly, taking other native species
Credit: Alamy
Giant Hogweed
Another common plant seen by the coast and in forests is Giant Hogweed.
It's one you want to steer clear of as it contains a potent chemical called furanocoumarins, which can cause serious injury if its sap touches human skin.
The reaction can lead to burning, blistering, and even permanent scarring, making this plant one of the most dangerous in the UK.
9
Giant Hogweed can cause harm to humans
Credit: Getty
New Zealand Pigmyweed
Last but not least is the New Zealand Pigmyweed, which wipes out any native species that crosses its path.
To prevent its spread, sales of this plant have been banned in the UK since 2014.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
4 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Brit tourist, 21, found dead on street in popular Algarve party resort as cops launch investigation
HOLIDAY TRAGEDY Brit tourist, 21, found dead on street in popular Algarve party resort as cops launch investigation Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BRIT tourist has been found dead in the Portuguese party resort of Albufeira. The 21-year-old man's body was discovered at the bottom of a set of steps in the old town of the Algarve holiday resort. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 The town of Albufeira is popular with Brit tourists Credit: Getty The alarm was raised just before 7am on Wednesday, Correo da Manha reports. An autopsy has already taken place but results have not been made public. It's understood Portuguese cops are not treating the death as suspicious. Police have not said whether the Brit was staying at a hotel in Albufeira. Read more world news BUG OFF Rancid-smelling super ants that form whopping colonies could infest the UK On Wednesday the body of a Scottish tourist who had been missing for seven days after vanishing during a night out in Albufeira was found. Greg Monks, 38, from Glasgow, had gone out drinking in the Albufeira strip after flying to the resort hours earlier with friends for a stag do. He is thought to have jumped over a wall and fallen down a steep cliff after becoming disorientated as he tried to head back to his holiday hotel. The plant mechanic was found by police at the bottom of a ravine. Sister Jillian Monks, 36, told the Daily Record: "We are truly heartbroken. Everyone who knows Greg knows how much he will be missed and what an amazing guy he was." Greg's sisters revealed the "alarm bells" moments after he vanished from the party hotspot. More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video. Like us on Facebook at and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSun.


Scottish Sun
5 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
‘TikTok addicted' mum-of-two, 29, who stole £300k from her firm to spend on ‘tokens' for favourite creators is jailed
Dozens of her colleagues faced redundancy due to her thieving RABBIT HOLE 'TikTok addicted' mum-of-two, 29, who stole £300k from her firm to spend on 'tokens' for favourite creators is jailed Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A SOCIAL media "addicted" mum who stole £300,000 from her employer to blow on TikTok "tokens" has been jailed. Katherine Greenall was in tears in the dock yesterday as she was told she'd be locked up for pinching the vast sum from a car company where she worked as an accounts manager. 3 Katherine Greenall, 29, spent a whopping £300,000 on TikTok tokens Credit: Merseyside Police 3 TikTok tokens can be bought for real money and used to send creators virtual gifts Credit: Getty 3 Greenall was sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court on Friday Credit: PA:Press Association The mum-of-two, 29, spent the vast majority of the cash on TikTok tokens, which users can gift to their favourite creators. However, the court also heard Greenall also treated herself to holidays, hotel stays and Amazon purchases during her year-long "voyage of fraud and misadventure", reports the Manchester Evening News. The thief claimed she now has only a few hundred pounds left in her bank account. Liverpool Crown Court heard on Friday afternoon, Greenall began working for St Helens-based New Reg Ltd, a technology firm which specialises in purchasing vehicles for clients, in a lesser role in April 2021. The mum, of the town's Gloucester Street, was promoted in December 2022, giving her access to business bank accounts. Prosecutor Christopher Taylor was considered "vital" to the growing firm and described as "both trusted and respected" before it was found she was siphoning off the funds into her own accounts. Analysis of Greenall's bank statements showed during 2023 she received 53 unauthorised deposits totalling £57,036 from her employer. During this period, she also began increasing her spending at supermarkets, as well as other food outlets, sports retailers and Amazon Prime. The court heard she also used the funds to pay for a family solicitor. Her spree ramped up in the early months of the following year, boosting her bank balance by another £196,364.26 by April 2024. Such large sums going missing raised suspicions amongst Greenall's superiors and were put to the defendant in a meeting with the company director on May 1. She pledged to investigate before making a "final deposit" of £20,000 immediately after and then left the office claiming there was an illness in her family. Greenall would later admit criminality during a meeting six days later and she was arrested on May 13. She told detectives she had been "living a lavish lifestyle" and had only £700 in her bank account. The mum said initially she'd been using the stolen money to pay for household purchases before she began funding her TikTok "obsession". Tokens on the platform can be bought with real money and exchanged for virtual gifts that users can send to creators during live streams, which can then be exchanged back to real cash. Greenall said the crime spree came "at a time when she was low", the court heard. Overall, she pinched £443,523.26 out of the company over 121 separate transactions, and spent £301,162.55 on TikTok tokens. Her actions jeopardised the future of the firm and placed over 30 former colleagues at risk of redundancy. Paul Becker, defending, told the court that his client "may have been suffering from a form of addiction to TikTok", but stated that she had "no formal diagnosis to such an addiction". Greenall's two children, an 11-year-old boy with severe ADHD, and a six-year-old girl, are anticipated to be looked after by their mum's sister. The defendant admitted one count of fraud by abuse of position and was jailed for 28 months. One of her supporters told her "I love you" from the public gallery as Greenall was led away. Judge Neil Flewitt KC said: "It is a tragedy that those children are going to suffer as a result of your dishonesty. "I have taken the view that there is simply no way to avoid what I am sure you have been advised is the inevitable sentence of imprisonment. "This is simply too much money and too much damage caused here." Do you know more? Email


Daily Mirror
9 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Horror moment 'Twilight killers' decided to slay family before cosy film night
'Twilight killers' Kim Edwards and Lucas Markham plotted together to butcher Edwards' own mother and sister, in a twisted plan borne out of an intense and warped relationship On the evening of April 13, 2016, Kim Edwards and her boyfriend Lucas Markham carried out a despicable double murder before settling in for a cosy movie night. The couple, who were just 14 years old at the time of the killings, ruthlessly killed Edwards' mum, Elizabeth, 49, and younger sister Katie, 13, in the culmination of a wicked plan the so-called 'Twilight killers' had concocted together at a McDonald's. Jurors at Nottingham Crown Court heard how, on the night of the murders, Markham had walked for about 30 minutes along Coronation Channel in Spalding, Lincolnshire, with four knives packed into his rucksack. He then knocked three times on a bedroom window, in a signal they had pre-arranged together. Opening a bathroom window, Edwards allowed Markham to enter the property from the shed roof, advising him on how to move around her family home quietly and undetected. READ MORE: Schoolboy's five chilling words after battering teacher and leaving her in pool of blood As would be later detailed during their trial, Edwards and Markham were involved in a twisted, intense relationship, which Edwards' mother, Elizabeth, disapproved of. Dinner lady Elizabeth attempted to split the young couple up, even contacting their school in an attempt to stop them spending so much time together. This left Edwards and Markham furious, and a sinister plan began to emerge, which psychologist Emma Kenny later compared to "Romeo and Juliet, but in a very dark manner", in an interview with the Mirror. Things began to escalate in March 2016, when Edwards was hospitalised following a suicide attempt. After she was discharged, she and Markham ran away together and were eventually found five days later, living in a tent in a neighbouring town. On April 9, 2016, Edwards and Markham barricaded themselves in Markham's room before heading to Edwards' home to retrieve her contraceptive pill. Once they arrived, they discovered Elizabeth had cleared Edwards' belongings out of the house, even given some of her possessions to Katie, whom Edwards already harboured resentment towards. In one police interview, Markham revealed the first time he raised the idea of killing Elizabeth and Katie. He remembered: "I said 'I wish I could kill them' and she said 'yeah', she thought I was joking but I was joking and then she realised I was being serious so she started being serious as well." The pair planned for Markham to stab Elizabeth in the throat to stop her screaming, while Edwards murdered Katie. Markham later told officers: "I went into her mum's room, stabbed her in the neck while she as asleep, then smothered her face with a pillow." Markham stabbed Elizabeth eight times, twice in the neck, once in the shoulder. The stab marks on her hands showed that the mother had struggled against her assailant. Recalling how she'd heard noises coming from her mother's room during the viscous attack, Edwards told police: "I went into the room to see what was going on because I heard noises and I wanted to check. "He was on top of her with like a pillow over her head. I though I heard her say 'get off me' but I'm not entirely sure. The after about 10 minutes of Lucas putting his weight on her, she was dead." Edwards ultimately decided she couldn't kill Katie, as she "couldn't take away those hopes and dreams". It's was then that Markham took over, slaughtering little Katie in the bedroom she'd shared with Kim. He remembered: He said: "I went into Katie's room, which was the same room as Kim's. I thought I stabbed her but it was the mattress and then I smothered her face with a pillow too." After the bloody killings, the pair took a bath, ate teacakes and ice-cream, and had sex, before cuddling up on the sofa to watch the teenage vampire movie, Twilight. They had intended their plan to end with their own suicides, but they ultimately decided not to go along with it, instead spending the next two days watching films, having sex and eating ice-cream. All the while, the bodies of Elizabeth and Katie lay upstairs. Eventually, their absences started to be noted, and officers broke into the property. Police found the teenage couple downstairs, and could barely bring themselves to believe they were the ones responsible for the horrific scenes they encountered upstairs. Delving into some of the simmering tensions at the heart of her troubled family life, Edwards described her Katie, as "an angel" and herself as a "train wreck", claiming that she'd felt her mother had loved her little sister more. She felt her mum loved her little sister - but she herself felt outside the family unit. Following her arrest, Edwards told officers: "Ever since I was young, I have never got on with my mum, I knew she favoured my sister more than me. Even when she said she didn't, she was lying." Both Markham and Edwards were given life sentences and ordered to spend at least 17 years behind bars.