2010.10.19 Vienna X. district/ Lower Austria, district Schwechat (Johannesberg - brownlands, 220 m).For remarks about the habitat see here.Dry plants in late fall, with seeds.ID: Fischer & al., Exkursionsflora 2008 (3rd); I cannot be a 100% sure about species, see also remarks here (shot on the same hill) but it should be A. collina
2010.01.01 Vienna X. district/ Lower Austria, district Schwechat (Johannesberg - brownlands, 220 m).For remarks about the habitat see here.Flowering from june till september; in this case obviously a plant grew in fall due to unseasonally warm weather, and it survived till mid-winter. When I looked after it in march 2010 the plant was gone, either eaten by animals or picked by humans.See also the other photo.ID: Fischer & al., Exkursionsflora 2008 (3rd); I cannot be a 100% sure about species but it should be A. collina (which varies a great deal in habitus)
2010.01.01 Vienna X. district/ Lower Austria, district Schwechat (Johannesberg - brownlands, 220 m).For remarks about the habitat see here.See description added to the other photo.ID: Fischer & al., Exkursionsflora 2008 (3rd)
Achillea millefoliumyarrow. If the North American and Eurasian yarrows were ever distinct, they no longer are so. Yarrow is in the words of the Jepson Manual, 2nd ed., a "highly variable polyploid complex" considered to be one species wherever it occurs. Thus, Achillea millefolium is one of the most widely distributed plants in the world. The genus name derives from Achilles, who used yarrow to stanch bleeding of men wounded in battle. The plant photographed is located along a public pathway in Berkeley, CA.
Kohler's Medizinal-Pflanzen in naturgetreuen Abbildungen mit kurz erlauterndem Texte :.Gera-Untermhaus :Fr. Eugen Kohler,[1883-1914].biodiversitylibrary.org/page/303704