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On a blustery June day near Redenhall, no more than four hundred metres from the Suffolk border the oilseed rape was overtopped by a mass of Black Mustard, Brassica nigra, which stretched along the edge of the crop for a good 50 metres.
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A little further down into the Waveney valley, the edge of the same crop was dominated by a dense strip Bastard Cabbage, Rapistrum rugosum. Although these two members of the cabbage family might be confused from a distance when in flower, the fruits of each species are quite distinctive
Bob Ellis
14.06.2018