Yarrow is a quite common plant in late spring, 1-2 feet tall. The stem is unbranched until just below the flat or dome-shaped flower mass (which can be 2-4″ across). Individual flowers are about 1/4″ across with five white to cream colored ray florets (rarely pink or rose), shallowly notched at the tips, and 10-20 cream to pale-yellowish disc florets. The most recognizable feature of yarrow is the finely-divided, feathery or fern-like leaves, permitting a confident ID even when the plant is not in bloom.
The hairy stem and a compound leaf of yarrow (Achillea millefolium).
Yarrow’s characteristic leaves are up to 6″ long and 1″ across (widest in the middle), alternate, sessile, pale green, and pinnate (or doubly pinnate), again often covered with cobwebby hairs. The most recognizable feature of yarrow is the finely-divided, feathery or fern-like leaves, permitting a confident ID even when the plant is not in bloom.
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