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But that’s just exactly what our Northwest native red twig dogwood ... and wet or dry soil. Twig dogwoods bear little resemblance to the dogwood tree that is well-known for its white or pink ...
Red twig dogwoods are tough plants. Equally happy in well-drained soil or clay, they can withstand drenched conditions in spring, yet are drought tolerant as a rock, needing little if any water ...
Two weeks ago, I thought I saw bird droppings on my red twig dogwood. They turned out to be caterpillars with a powdery white coating. More were curled under the leaves. Now my shrubs are being ...
The red-twig dogwood ... Tatarian dogwood, is a pleasant shrub that offers so much to central Ohio gardens. The 21/2-inch medium gray-green foliage is variegated with irregular white on the ...
Maybe you have been fortunate enough to spot a dogwood tree, or even a small grove of them, in full bloom on an Appalachian hillside in springtime. The ivory white ... Red-twig dogwood and yellow ...
Question: We have some red twig dogwood shrubbery ... with their contrasting fiery stems against a white blanket of snow. Depending on the cultivar, the stems can range from dark blood red ...
Redtwig dogwood (Cornus stolonifera) punctuates the winter landscape with brilliant red to deep burgundy ... especially paper birch (B. papyrifera), which has creamy white to brilliant white ...
“I have a red twig dogwood shrub I planted at least two years ago in my backyard that tends to be moist and shaded by some adjacent trees. It has only grown to about 3 feet tall and has thin foliag ...
I have a red-twig dogwood shrub I planted at least four years ago. It has only grown to 3 feet tall and gets a few leaves each year. It gets three to four hours of sun. The shrub is about 6 feet ...