Helichrysum foetidum, sometimes called the stinking everlasting and in Afrikaans the vleisewejaartjie (marsh everlasting), is a short-lived shrublet growing to 1 m in height. The vigorous upper stem in picture is well covered in healthy leaves. The plant does not resprout after fire.
The pointed, dark green leaves have white midribs and margins. The grey-woolly lower leaf surfaces end in the white margins. Leaf margins are entire, here sporadically undulating. The lateral veins are much fainter than the midrib. They ascend towards the leaf-tips about halfway across the blade halves, becoming almost parallel between the margins and the midribs.
The species distribution is in the Western Cape from the Cederberg to the Cape Peninsula and eastwards to the Eastern Cape as far as the Katberg and Amathole Mountains.
The habitat is damp rocky slopes, often near streams and along forest margins or on disturbed ground. The habitat population is deemed of least concern early in the twenty first century (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; Manning, 2007; iNaturalist; http://redlist.sanbi.org).