![]() Attractive glossy leaves on a dense shrub just 2 feet tall.Cold-resistant plant with bright red winter twigs. ![]() Grow it as a foreground plant in beds, along paths and driveways, or in natural woodland gardens. Fall color is bright orange, red and purple, and the winter twigs are bright red, looking attractive against snow, or beside water. This selection of a native bush grows only a little over 2 feet tall and wide, with dense, twiggy growth and glossy summer leaves. Kelsey’s Red Twig Dogwood is a low-growing deciduous shrub notable for its bright red winter twigs. We've gotta protect good ole' Mother Nature, after all. While we wish we could serve everyone, it's for the safety of native species and helps prevent the spread of invasive disease & pests. The short & sweet answer is: "United States Department of Agriculture Restrictions." Every state has their own unique USDA restrictions on which plants they allow to come into their state. You will receive email notifications along the way on the progress of your order, as well as tracking information to track your plants all the way to their new home! Why are some states excluded from shipping? Orders typically ship out within 2 business days. How does the delivery process work?Īll of our orders ship via FedEx Ground! Once your order is placed online, our magic elves get right to work picking, staging, boxing and shipping your trees. You'll find we carry young 1-gallons, up to more mature 7-gallons ranging anywhere from 6 inches to 6ft. While the industry-standard terminology is to call the sizes "Gallon Containers", that doesn't exactly translate to the traditional liquid "gallon" size we think of. Nursery containers come in a variety of different sizes, and old-school nursery slang has stuck. I have a plan in mind for our front porch planting bed using dwarf cherry laurels and red twig dogwoods to give our drab winter landscape a little color interest.All tree, and nothin' but the tree! We measure from the top of the soil to the top of the tree the height of the container or the root system is never included in our measurements. Red twig dogwoods or red-osier dogwoods are great for winter color. ![]() It’s it can be a good sign that roots have appeared when propagated plants have started to leaf out. Two of them are leafing out and two others have roots but no leaves yet. My hope for the little dogwoods turned out to be well founded. I re-stuck the dogwoods into the same pot I used for the rooted butterfly bush cuttings then brought them inside. I had been keeping them in the garage near a window so I figured that bringing them inside into the warmth might hasten the rooting process. Just after I transplanted my butterfly bush cuttings ( Adventures on a Warm Winter Day!) I thought I would try to bring in a few more cuttings from outside and the dogwoods were the main candidates. After I prepared the cuttings they sat for several weeks without anything happening. I took some cuttings in an attempt to propagate Red Twig Dogwood (Cornus stolonifera) back in the fall. This week I was excited to find that something I had given up for lost actually worked, cuttings of a red twig dogwood.
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