Shepherd's purse is a non-polluting green, wild seasonal vegetables. It defies the cold and thrives in winter.
Huh, the front found a few trees. So big ah, hurry to dig up!
Are you sure this is a shepherd's purse? The first thing you need to do is to take a look at the water and the water!
This leaf blade hairy broken weeds called stinking cabbage. It is a cruciferous, one-way vegetable family, one-way vegetable genus of herbaceous plants, also known as the local people stinking chestnut. Its leaves are flat on the ground, the basal leaves are clustered, long-petiolate, the leaf blade is narrowly spatulate, pinnately lobed or y lobed; the stem leaves are alternate, sessile, the leaf blade is striped, sparsely toothed or entire.
And shepherd's purse, is the following look.
Shepherd's purse is a cruciferous family, cabbage, caper plants, its basal leaves with short stalks, leaf blade for the big head pinnately divided. The upper leaves are sessile, lobes ovate to oblong, apically acuminate, lobed, or irregularly coarsely serrate or nearly entire.
Here's a comparison picture of the same frame. On closer inspection, their leaves are still very different.
This caper in the upper right corner is a bit small ha! Although the two look particularly similar, but treated very differently, the stink of a single line of vegetables is the farmers hate weeds, while the caper is widely welcomed by the people. The old man invented dumplings filled with water chestnuts!
Below, we also give you a little homework, in order to better memorize and distinguish between these two plants. The content is very simple, is to "find the difference" in the picture!
Take a close look at this picture and see how many capers and how many stinking solenoids are in the picture.
Look closely.