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Height: | up to 1m |
The soft, downy look of Yorkshire-fog makes it an attractive plant, even if it is considered a weed of cultivated land! It is also attractive to the caterpillars of the Small Skipper butterfly as a foodplant.
About
Yorkshire-fog is a tufted, grey-green and downy plant of meadows, woodland rides, waste ground and lawns. Its purple-tinged flower heads appear from May to August. It can produce dense stands that push out other species and is can be considered a weed of arable land.
However, it is still valuable to wildlife and is the main foodplant of the caterpillars of the small skipper butterfly.
How to identify
Yorkshire-fog has grey-green leaves and cylindrical, tightly packed flower heads that have a purple-red tinge to their tips. Both the leaves and the flowers have a 'soft' appearance.
Did you know?
Because of its soft look, Yorkshire-fog is known as 'velvet grass' in North America. Here, it probably got its name from a description of how it looks at a distance: misty and grey with a purple tinge, which is something between northern smoke-billowing factories and heather moorland!