Pagoda dogwood is an excellent native plant for the four-season garden. The unique horizontal branching pattern has a distinct tiered habit, often catching snow in the winter. Clusters of white flowers show up in spring, dark green foliage turns a beautiful burgundy-red in fall, and blue.
Pagoda Dogwood is a lovely, subtle woodland native tree with attractively layered horizontal branching. The flat fluffy ivory flowers appear in late May to early June and are powerfully fragrant. They are followed by bluish black fruit in August which are attractive to birds.
The fall color of Cornus alternifolia is often a mild reddish purple, followed by a winter interest element provided by. A beautiful landscape shrub, Pagoda Dogwood (Cornus alternifolia) grows naturally along woodland edges as a small understory tree. It prefers partial sun, a moist well-drained site, and a rich soil that is somewhat acidic.
Fragrant white flower clusters in spring are followed by dark blue berries on red stems in mid to late summer. The leaves turn a soft maroon color in the fall. Pagoda.
Native to Wisconsin's woodlands and forests, Pagoda Dogwood is an incredibly useful small tree or large shrub that provides year-round interest in the landscape. In spring, two-inch clusters of slightly fragrant flowers bloom and then give way to blue-black berries on red peduncles (flower stalks) in summer, a favorite of native wildlife. Maroon fall color and an attractive, horizontal.
A small, short-lived A small, short. Pagoda dogwood is a small tree or tall shrub with an interesting horizontal branching habit and bight red fall color. It is native to places like Northern Minnesota, but is marginally hardy here due to our dry air and alkaline soils.
A large multi-stemmed native shrub that is known for its distinctive, tiered horizontal branching and brilliant purple. Burgundy foliage in fall. Good alternative to cold-sensitive Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida) in northern areas.
Many insects use flowers, including bees, wasps, flies, butterflies. Moth and butterfly caterpillars eat foliage. Pagoda dogwood (Cornus alternifolia).
Photo by Scott Woodbury. Pagoda Dogwood (Cornus alternifolia) flowers. Photo by.
Dogwoods, from the genus Cornus, consist of a large group of flowering trees and shrubs.These plants are wildly popular because they provide interest year-round - with blooms early in the spring, berries in the summer, and stunning fall colors.Some dogwood species even feature colorful stems, providing winter appeal to your landscape.This, paired with an average height of 20 feet, dogwoods.