CORNUS
CORNUS
Commonly known as Dogwood
Genus of about 60 species of mainly deciduous shrubs and small trees from grasslands, thickets, woodland, rocky slopes and swamps mainly in northern temperate areas.
Grown for their showy bracts, elegant habit, fruits and colourful autumn leaves.
The species have been used as food and medicine and in manufacture of small implements and cutting boards. The wood is beautiful, fine-grained and hard.
The "dogwood' name might have come from the "dags" (daggers, skewers and arrows) made from the slender stems. Fruits were known as "dogberries".
Two species are represented in the UK. C. mas is a widely found introduction, C sanguinea, a native, extending particularly on chalk as far north as the Midlands.
Full Plant Details - Sun/Soil & other attributes
-
Good to know
Foliage is particularly clean and bright -
Pests & Diseases
None -
Place of origin
USA. A florida/kousa cross found by Don Shadow, from a sport of Celestial from Rutgers University, New Jersey. -
Deciduous
-
Height
5m (15ft) -
Spread
4m (12ft) -
Tall ShrubBracts, to 7cm (3in) in diameter, are white with a hint of green.
-
Fertile well drained soilHumus-rich.
-
Neutral to acid soil
-
Full sun
shelter from cold winds. -
Partial shade
-
Broadly conical
-
Mature Size5m (15ft)
4m (12ft)