The State of Virginia has adopted the dogwood
flowering tree as its State tree, and many cities in America have named
themselves 'The Dogwood City.' Atlanta, Georgia holds a spring festival
every April to coincide with the flowering of the of the dogwood trees
in Atlanta, Georgia. The Dogwood Festival has continued for 70 years,
successfully attracting visitors for events such as outdoor musical
extravaganzas in Piedmont Park and the attraction of many artists to
display and sell to those visitors who wish to buy pottery, sculpture,
oil paintings, and photographs.
Flowering dogwood trees, Cornus
florida, were discovered in the South by William Bartram in 1773; these
trees were beautifully described in his exploratory book, Travels (page
399). Near Mobile, Alabama. Bartram encountered a grove of dogwood
trees that aggressively covered an area 9 miles long. The dogwood trees
were growing so thick that sunlight was practically excluded, and
almost all other plant life was excluded except for an occasional white
flowering Magnolia grandiflora. The land on which the white flowering
dogwood tree grew was level soil that was loose with a humid black
organic mould on the surface with dogwood roots growing into a stiff
yellowish clay. The limbs of the flowering dogwood trees were
interlocking and spread horizontally at a tree height of 12 feet. The
vast interlocking limbs of the dogwood trees covered the entire area as
a shade tree that cooled the camping area used by William Bartram.
After exploring for another seventy miles, Bartram wrote "spacious
groves of this fine flowering tree, which must, in the spring season,
when covered with blossoms, present a most pleasing scene; when at the
same time a variety of other sweet shrubs display their beauty.
The
white flowering dogwood is a native tree to the forests of America and
has been exported worldwide as a seedling dogwood and as a grafted
white dogwood also flowering in pink and red. The pink flowering
dogwood is available to buy as a seed grown tree, but the most
desirable, stable, predictable pink dogwood trees are nursery grafted
trees. Red flowering dogwood trees are not available as seedling trees,
but as grafted cultivars, such as the Cherokee Chief, red flowering
dogwood tree.
The dogwood tree, Cornus florida, is very adaptable
in America, ranging from Massachusetts to Florida, and the tree is
generally grown as an understory tree 12-15 feet tall, although some
old specimens of 40 feet tall are recorded. The flowering dogwood tree
is perfect for planting and growing in a small garden or in large parks
and as big landscape specimen trees. Dogwood has the unusual quality of
growing well when planted beneath pine trees, where only a few other
shrubs such as redbud trees, azalea plants, and camellia shrubs can
compete successfully, because of the dense root pine tree competition
near the surface of the ground.
The flowering of dogwood trees
begins in early spring and the flowering lasts 2 to 3 weeks. Oval
berries of bright red are formed following the blooms and persist on
the trees into fall and winter after leaves are shed, and until they
are eaten by wildlife and birds. In the fall the dogwood trees are
covered in brilliant red leaves that change to purple. The fallen
dogwood leaves are very fragile and usually easily deteriorate without
raking. Flowering dogwood trees will grow well underneath oak tree
shade as well as under pine trees, but the dogwood tree remarkably will
grow well in full sun. Dogwood trees are well adapted to stress and are
very tolerant of dry weather. Dogwood trees are tolerant of cold
weather, and thrive in USDA zones 5 through 9.
Every landscape
gardener appreciates the spring blooms of the white flowering dogwood
trees as a background companion tree for flowering redbud trees or in a
combination of flowering azalea shrubs in colors of red, pink, purple,
or white.
Dogwood trees can be propagated by growing from the
seed or by rooting the cutting, but the best dogwood cultivars are
grown from grafted trees. The Cloud Nine, flowering, white dogwood tree
produces very large (hand-size) blooms, especially in the juvenile
stage. The Weaver's Select, white, flowering dogwood tree is grafted
and can produce a flower 6 inches wide.
The dogwood tree has been
rumored to have been the wood from which the crucifixion cross of Jesus
Christ was made in the year 33 AD. This rumor is ridiculous in several
respects: first, there is not Biblical record of dogwood trees in the
Scriptures of the Old Testament Bible or the New Testament. Most plant
references in the Bible are very vague except for a few references to
the date palm tree, olive tree, pomegranate trees, fig tree, and grape
vines. The identity of those plants and trees is obvious, because of
their fruits that are produced, but accurate plant identity could not
be done easily until Carl Linnaeus, a Swedish physician, suggested
rules on naming plants in the early 1700's.
There are many
species of dogwood trees and shrubs, but it is unlikely that any of the
Mideastern species of dogwood trees grew trunks large enough to shape
into a crucifixion cross. The wood of the dogwood tree is so hard and
dense that nails driven into the wood would split the wood. That tree
definitely could not have been the North American dogwood tree, Cornus
florida, since that tree did not grow in Israel at the time of Jesus
Christ.
Perhaps the reason for the rumor is that the dogwood tree
was the wood of the crucifixion cross is the fact that the four white
bracts (flower) are shaped like a cross. This resemblance of a white
cross-shaped flower occurs in innumerable species of flowers of trees
and, of course, should not be given any weight of evidence of the
dogwood tree wood being the substance of crucifixions by the Jewish
High Priest and the Roman rulers.
Learn more about various plants, or purchase ones mentioned in this article by visiting the author's website: TyTy Nursery