Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — main view
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — detail
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — close-up
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — in setting
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — additional view
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — additional view
Pennsylvania Cudweed (Gnaphalium pensylvanicum) — additional view

Plant Guide

Pennsylvania Cudweed

Autumn Fast Growing Flowering Plants
Oasislink Garden & Outdoor Team March 25, 2026 5 min read

Pennsylvania cudweed is a tough little annual in the daisy family that looks like it’s been dusted in soft white felt. Its upright-to-ascending stems and narrow-to-spoon-shaped leaves are coated in woolly hairs, giving the plant a pale, silvery cast. It makes clusters of small, button-like flower heads that read as whitish with a faint blush of pale pink to pinkish-purple. You’ll often spot it popping up wherever soil gets disturbed—roadsides, field edges, and garden corners—where it can quietly self-seed and form a casual, naturalistic “wild” groundcover.

Scientific Name Gnaphalium pensylvanicum
Family / Genus Asteraceae / Gnaphalium
Origin Widely found across Taiwan and many provinces of southern and central China (including Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangxi, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan, Sichuan). Common along roadsides and in cultivated fields.
Aliases Cudweed, Pennsylvania Everlasting

Continue Reading

Handpicked entries for your next read