May's featured weed is Gamochaeta coarctata (shiny cudweed or gray everlasting).
Shiny cudweed is an annual winter weed that loves disturbed soils, low fertility, and thin lawns. I've also read it's a biennial 🤷🏻♀️ and this may be true if you don't eradicate it, LOL.Viewing Tip: Increase the volume and the playback speed according to your preferences. Volume control is the speaker icon on the lower left; playback speed is the gear button on the lower right.
There are a lot of cudweeds and it gets confusing because there have been changes to the scientific nomenclature. Other types in the Southeast are:
Pseudognaphalium obtusifolium - rabbit tobacco
Learn more from these websites:
If you aren't going to try to eat shiny cudweed as "chewing gum" (hence, cud) or smoke rabbit tobacco (hence, tobacco), then I think identifying to the level of simply cudweed suffices for our purposes of eradication from our lawns.
Bonus: Cudweeds are hosts to American lady butterflies, so that's something to consider before you totally set your heart against this ugly-but-useful group of weeds.
Flowers form in the center of the rosette (top pic) and also from the longer side branches (bottom pic). Note: oak tree catkins (flowers) have fallen on the cudweed leaves, so don't confuse them with being part of the weed.