Cornus sericea, Redosier Dogwood 2-3ft Wholesale Native Bare Root Shrubs

$3.00

Out of stock

Cornus sericea, Redosier Dogwood  2-3′ Wholesale Native Bare Root Shrubs

2-3′ Bare root shrub seedlings require a minimum order of 25 or more of a single species.

25 or more $3.00 each

50 or more $2.30 each
300 or more $2.05 each

1000 or more Please call

For Shipping, Install and additional info please see “About Bare Root“.

Native bare root shrubs and trees are dug and shipped while dormant, late November to Mid April.

See all available Native Bare Root Shrubs

Check the native status of this species for your area via the USDA Plants Database here.   

Order Minimum

There is a minimum order total of $150.00.

before tax (VA residents only) and shipping.

There are NO EXCEPTIONS.

Description

Cornus sericea, Redosier Dogwood  2-3′ Wholesale Native Bare Root Shrubs

2-3′ Bare root shrub seedlings require a minimum order of 25 or more of a single species.

Botanic Native Name: Cornus sericea
Common Native Name: Red osier dogwood, Red Osier dogwood, red twig dogwood, redstem dogwood

Attractive Bark:
Attractive Fall Color:
Attractive Flowers:
Beneficial Insects:
Butterflies:
Edible Fruit:
Erosion Control:
FAC – Occur in wetlands and non-wetlands:
Flood Tolerant:
Four Season Interest:
Full-Part Sun (6+ hours of sun):
Game Birds:
High Wildlife Value:
Native to Coastal Regions:
Native To Mountain Regions:
Native to Piedmont Regions:
Occasionally wet soil (non-tidal):
Part Sun-Part Shade :
Sandy soil, coarse texture:
Native Bare Root Shrub:
Small Mammals:
Songbirds:
Waterfowl:
Botanic Native Name: Cornus sericea
Common Native Name: Red osier dogwood, Red Osier dogwood, red twig dogwood, redstem dogwood
Exposure:

  • Full Sun
  • Part Sun
  • Part Shade
  • Full Shade

moisture:

  • Dry
  • Average
  • Moist
  • Wet
  • Tidal

 Type: Bare Root Shrub

  • Clay
  • Loamy
  • Sandy
  • Organic

Mature height / spread: 6-12′
Flower: White, June-August
Fruit: White
Fall Color: Red
Soil Ph: 6.1-7.5
Ethnobotanic:
Native Americans smoke the inner bark of red osier dogwood in tobacco mixtures used in the sacred pipe ceremony. Dreamcatchers, originating with the Potawatomi, are made with the stems of the sacred red-osier dogwood. Some tribes ate the white, sour berries, while others used the branches for arrow-making, stakes, or other tools. The fleshy fruits of dogwoods are very
valuable to wildlife, particularly in the Northeast (Martin et al. 1951). The fruit ripens in late summer, and besides being available through the fall, some of the berries may persist on the plants into the winter months. Wildlife browse the twigs, foliage, and fruits. Birds known to eat the fruit include: wood ducks, eastern bluebirds, cardinals, catbirds, long-tailed chats, crows, purple finches, yellow-shafted flickers, crested flycatchers, grosbeaks, kingbirds, American magpies, mockingbirds, crested mynah birds, orioles, robins, yellow-bellied sapsuckers, European starlings, tree swallows, scarlet tanagers, brown thrashers, thrushes, vireos, pine warblers, cedar waxwings, and woodpeckers. Game birds who eat both the fruits and buds include grouse, ring-necked pheasants, band-tailed pigeons, greater prairie chickens, bobwhite quail, and wild turkeys. The shrubs provide excellent nesting habitat for songbirds. Mammals that eat the fruit and foliage include beaver, mountain beaver, cottontail rabbits, raccoons, eastern skunks, squirrels, chipmunks, mice, and rats. Deer, elk, Mountain goat, and moose browse the twigs and foliage.

Cornus sericea, Redosier Dogwood  2-3′ Wholesale Native Bare Root Shrubs

2-3′ Bare root shrub seedlings require a minimum order of 25 or more of a single species.

1000 or more Please call

For Shipping, Install and additional info please see “About Bare Root“.

Native bare root shrubs and trees are dug and shipped while dormant, late November to Mid April.

See all available Native Bare Root Shrubs

Check the native status of this species for your area via the USDA Plants Database here.