This certainly appears to be a Gnaphalium.  Enumeration of the Flowering 
plants of Nepal lists 3 species: G.affine, G.hypoleucum & G.polycaulon -
there seems confusion over nomenclature.

Flora of Kathmandu Valley gives 2 species:  G.hypoleucum & G.luteo-album.  
The latter species is recorded from 1300-2300m on open, dry slopes; 
known as 'Kairo jhar'.  Described as having golden-yellow heads in dense 
corymbs.

Flowers of Himalaya describe G.affine & G.hypoleucum; surprisingly they 
have a photo of the latter species (not close-up and with flower-heads most
people would pay little attention to) but only a line drawing of the 
brightly coloured G.affine - which is eye-catching.  A photo of this 
appears in the Supplement
to Flowers of the Himalaya but fewer people have this.

*Of these, it seems to fit G.affine (syn. G.luteo-album var. multiceps) 
which FoH says a very common weed in cultivated areas @ 1200-3000m from 
Pakistan to **Bhutan & sub-tropical Asia.  Flower-heads globular, bright 
glistening yellow.   AND, rather surprisingly, seems to be NEW to eFI.*

Beware of the ALARMING number of synonyms some of the Gnaphaliums have.  
G.polycaulon is described as a pantropic weed.

On Tuesday, January 24, 2017 at 4:25:29 PM UTC, Saroj Kumar Kasaju wrote:

> Dear members 
>
> Location:Bajrabarahi,Nepal 
> Altitude: 4700 ft.
> Date: 31 December 2016
>
> Gnaphalium ...???
>
> Thank you.
>
> Saroj Kasaju
>

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