It's ragwort.
It has pretty yellow flowers in the summer, and it's also the food plant of the cinnabar moth, which is a day-flying red-and-black moth which has rather striking orange-and-black stripy caterpillars, which appear in large numbers. The moths are fairly common, so if you leave it you may well see caterpillars on it this summer (I see them in my garden some years).
But, it can also spread a fair bit (it has seeds like dandelions, on little parachutes) and it's poisonous (it's considered a problem weed on grazing land for that reason).
If you decide to pull it out them it can go on the compost bin roots and all. As long as you chop the roots up, they won't grow back, and it won't poison your compost.
It has pretty yellow flowers in the summer, and it's also the food plant of the cinnabar moth, which is a day-flying red-and-black moth which has rather striking orange-and-black stripy caterpillars, which appear in large numbers. The moths are fairly common, so if you leave it you may well see caterpillars on it this summer (I see them in my garden some years).
But, it can also spread a fair bit (it has seeds like dandelions, on little parachutes) and it's poisonous (it's considered a problem weed on grazing land for that reason).
If you decide to pull it out them it can go on the compost bin roots and all. As long as you chop the roots up, they won't grow back, and it won't poison your compost.
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