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Favourite "Weed"
I'm seeing lots of posts with people asking "is it a weed or not?" and thinking it would be fun to find out which plants you like that others consider a weed.
My absolute favourites:
1. lesser celandine
2. Speedwell
3. Green alkanet
4. Herb Robert
I don't have any of no. 3, which may be why I don't mind it, and I'm happy to pull out the Herb Robert when it's in the wrong place but it quite usefully lines the edges of my garden when nothing else is there. And great for finches.
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Ahhhhh!!!! . . . . to lesser celendine in my garden especially in the lawn. Love it in the local wood but NOT in the garden. Oh I can't even think of some of the 'weeds' I do like now - will have to go and calm down for a whilewhile.
I used to leave a patch of nettles but, to be honest, my garden is surrounded on 3 sides by arable fields or pasture and there are paddocks opposite, all with loads of nettles and creeping buttercup and dock and couch grass and thistles and dandelions and bindweed and bittercress and groundsel and herb Robert and ground ivy and mare's tail. All of these feel free to spread their roots and seeds into my garden and grow with gay abandon if I let them.
I now have a no tolerance policy and clear them when I'm doing the spring clean, the autumn clear and intervening weeding programme. This doesn't mean I don't still have weeds as they seem to grow again the minute I turn my back.
Off the top of my head and in no particular order:
Cow parsley
Red clover
Herb Robert
Lesser celandine
Pink and white deadnettles
Jack by the Hedge
Cuckoo Pint
Ladies Bedstraw
Ramsons
Butterbur
Selfheal
Ground ivy
Dog's mercury
Common Restharrow
Eggs and bacon
Meadow buttercup
Ox-eye daisy
I could go on ........and on..........and on............
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Ramsons isn't a weed here yet. I'm nurturing a patch of 3 whole plants and looking forward to eating some one of these springs.
Forgot to mention sticky bud and volunteer brambles and willows.
Purple toadflax
Beautiful, adds height, pollinator friendly and very easy to pull up if it seeds in an unwanted area.
I have pots of the stuff growing on to be transplanted into my borders I like it that much! I'll be using it at the back of an annual display I'm creating that will contain purple toadflax, cornflower blue, larkspur and ornamental clary.
Red and White Clover. Makes a far nicer "lawn" than grass.
I would have to look up most of those weeds Dove!
Lady's Mantle comes to mind as a useful 'weed'
Bind weed is actually quite attractive...but better not in a garden!
Weeds that I have kept in my garden (as in self sown) are Purple Orchid (Orchis mascula), Holly, several Birch and Pine trees, teasals, Foxglove and some others.
I get rid of Couch grass, clover, creeping clover and buttercup, bittercress, chickweed and Horsetail and etc etc.
They're the 'flowers' of my childhood Blairs
I grew up on a farm in a very rural village and was fortunate enough to go to the little village school (13 children in the whole school) and we had lessons in the meadow and went for naturewalks in the afternoons. We saw slow worms, adders and orchids and learned to love and respect nature - absolute bliss 
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
I'm a bit of a novice - and can't name most of the weeds I like. One springs to mind which has brown/purple leaves like clover leaves - very small creaping plant that I think has yellow flowers.
In my garden currently I'm dealing mainly with brambles and nettles - and honestly they're so much work any other weed is being tollerated by default as I have no time/energy to deal with them!