DOGWOOD (Cormis florida L.) 



THE dogweod, sometimes referred to in books as 

 flowering dogwood, is found growing throughout 

 the State, usually under the larger forest trees. It 

 is a small tree, usually 15 to 30 feet high and (5 to 12 

 inches in diameter, occasionally larger, with a rather 

 flat and spreading crown and short, often crooked 

 trunk. The bark is reddish brown to black and 



broken up into small 

 4-sided scaly blocks. 

 The leaves are op- 

 posite, ovate, 3 to 5 

 inches long, 2 to 3 

 inches wide, pointed, 

 entire or wavy on 

 the margin, bright 

 green above, pale 

 green or grayish 

 beneath. 



The flowers, which 

 unfold from the con- 

 spicuous, round, 

 grayish, winter flow- 

 er buds before the 

 leaves come out, 2- 



are small, greenish 

 yellow, arranged in 

 dense heads s u r- 

 rounded b y large 

 white or rarely pink- 

 ish petal-like bracts, 

 which give the ap- 

 pearance of large spreading flowers 2 to 1 inches 

 across. 



The fruit is a bright scarlet "berry," one-half an 

 inch long and containing a hard nutlet in which are 

 1 or 2 seeds. Usually several fruits, or "berries," are 

 contained in one head. They are relished by birds, 

 squirrels and other animals. 



The wood is hard, heavy, strong, very close- 

 grained, brown to red in color. It is in great demand 

 for cotton-mill machinery, turnery handles and 

 forms. One other tree has quite similar wood — the 

 persimmon. ' 



The dogwood, wittf its masses of early spring flow- 

 ers, its dark-red autumn foliage and its bright-red 

 berries, is probably our most ornamental native tree. 

 It should be used much more extensively in roadside 

 and ornamental planting. 



DOGWOOD 



Leaf, one-half natural size. 

 Twig, two-thirds natural size. 



