Thank you Pete and Lorraine. No the first one doesn't have thorns. It's quite thick at the base (about 1 cm) and and the stems are very bendy and supple. I've not planted an eleagnus or linaria so I think both are weeds to me. Although the linaria looks like it might be pretty so it might get a stay of execution as long as it doesn't interfere with my acer that I moved last summer and is right behind it as you can see in the photo.
I thought euphorbia too at first - but I think it's the close-up photo that lead me astray. Grow the linaria and if you don't like it, dig it up before it drops seed. I really like them - it'll probably have blue flowers like this
The eleagnus does develop big thorns in time, I removed a very big one from my garden a few years ago - it was a painful experience. The young foliage has a dusty, yellowish appearance. But it's quite a boring shrub tbh.
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
I think there's a way to find out... I've got both in my garden. I just snapped a leaf from the euphorbia, and I can see the white milky sap (don't let it get on your skin) I snapped the top from a linaria, and the sap is clear.
I think B3 may have solved the conundrum, so try a leaf from the bit laying across the brick edging and then snap a leaf from the taller more upright one and let us know what you find
Love a good mystery
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
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the 2nd is a euphorbia
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
Grow the linaria and if you don't like it, dig it up before it drops seed.
I really like them - it'll probably have blue flowers like this
The eleagnus does develop big thorns in time, I removed a very big one from my garden a few years ago - it was a painful experience. The young foliage has a dusty, yellowish appearance. But it's quite a boring shrub tbh.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
It could be two plants one of each though
I've got both in my garden.
I just snapped a leaf from the euphorbia, and I can see the white milky sap (don't let it get on your skin)
I snapped the top from a linaria, and the sap is clear.
I think B3 may have solved the conundrum, so try a leaf from the bit laying across the brick edging and then snap a leaf from the taller more upright one and let us know what you find
Love a good mystery
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.