Sawa hiyodori (scientific name eupatorium lindleyanum) is a perennial herb of the Asteraceae family that grows in sunny meadows and wetlands throughout Japan.
The leaves are narrow, with coarsely serrated edges, often in a 3-deep ring to the base of the leaf.
It produces numerous pale red head flowers consisting of five tubular flowers in autumn, which are characterized by their white cordate shape.
The Japanese name, sawa hiyodori, means "swamp bulbul," and is derived from the fact that the leaves resemble the wings of a bulbul and often grow in wet environments, such as swamps.
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