Posts Tagged ‘twig dogwood’

Garden Coach on Propagating Red Twig Dogwood From Cuttings

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Pam from Maribel, WI writes:

“Can you cut slips from a variegated red twig dogwood”

Pam, thanks for writing in. Yes, propagating red twig dogwood (or yellow twig or the many cultivars)  is fairly simple from cuttings. (For those of you unfamiliar with terms like “slips” and “propagating”, these terms refer to methods of creating new plants from cuttings of existing plants.)

Spreading Shoots in Light Areas are Ready Divisions

Spreading Shoots in Light Areas are Ready Divisions

Here in Western Washington it is often as simple as taking a cutting of younger growth, removing the lowest internode, and sticking the cutting into the soil. It is such a vigorous grower, that quite often it will take off on its own. However, dipping your twig dogwood’s cut end in a bit of rooting hormone may give you a little added insurance.

By-the-way, did you know you can soak fresh willow in water for 24-48 hours and use that water as rooting hormone? Before you could buy rooting hormone in a jar, this was a traditional rooting stimulator.

There are other methods I’ve read about for propagating twig dogwoods by taking cuttings in fall and storing the cuttings indoors in sawdust over winter to create a bareroot type cutting. When I studied horticulture in college, a few fellow students experimented with this method only to come up with useless twigs by spring. However, it is a known method if you want to give it a shot.

Finally, I always suggest looking around the perimeter of your twig dogwood for spreading shoots. My Midwinter Fire twig dogwood has started spreading underground over the last few years, so it is fairly simple for me to create new plants by digging up the unwanted spreaders.

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Twig Dogwood Question for the Garden Coach

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

One of my clients who lives in a woodland setting recently wrote in to ask:

 ”What are the names of the dogwoods you mentioned (when we last met). (The nursery) had a lot, but it was hard to tell if they were the ones you mentioned.”

Response:
Two nice twig dogwoods for you to consider are:

Cornus ‘Midwinter Fire’

Cornus ‘Midwinter Fire’: Yellow branches at the ground graduate up toward reddish-orange tips add brilliant twiggy color in winter. The shrub leaves can range from chartreuse to orangish to green.

Cornus alba ‘Elegantissima’: Red twigs with green and cream leaves in summer. The variegated leaves are particularly nice I a dark, shady garden corner as they will add brightness in the summer months while the red twigs will pop out against an evergreen backdrop in winter.

One thing to avoid is planting these two together. It will look polka-dotty. Select one for one area of the garden and another for another area of the garden. Keep in mind they will mature to 6’-8’ tall and suckering in width.

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