Orange Dogwood 20/40cm Cell grown Cornus sanguinea

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Orange Dogwood or Cornus Sanguinea is mostly grown for its orange coloured stems that provides a bright flash of colour in autumn and winter.
  • AVERAGE GROWING
  • HAS BERRIES
  • HAS FLOWERS (White)
  • Is Grazing Animal Friendly
  • Planting Conditions: Suitable for normal, Chalk and Clay Soils in Full Sun or Semi Shade. Inland Sites
  • Growth Rate: expect average growth between 20cm and 40cm per year
  • Height: grows upto 3 metres in height
  • Bare root plants are shown in winter dormancy as a single bare root and a bundle for comparison. Please note if ordering 1 x bare root, this will be a single plant not a bundle unless shown as a multibuy item.
  • 12 Month Guarantee On All Plants - Buy With Confidence

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SKU COSA-PG-20/40-CG
No. Plants (7 per metre)
+
£29.88

Cornus sanguinea

Dogwoods are mostly grown for their coloured stems and provide a bright flash of colour in Autumn and Winter. We have several varieties but they all have similar habits - creamy, white flowers in spring, followed by blue/white berries, with oval dark green leaves, which redden in Autumn, and then fall to reveal the gorgeous brightly coloured stems. They look great with other species in a mixed hedge or standing on their own. Dogwoods are very hardy and do well in sunny sites or partial shade and especially in moist areas. They are also very good in front of an evergreen hedge where normally nutrients, water and sunlight would be in short supply. Robins and mistle thrushes love the berries in late Summer/early Autumn.

To get the brightest coloured stems, Dogwoods should be treated with "tough love" , don't prune them in the first year, but after that, before they bud (February/March) cut them down to a woody base within 4" of the ground every year, feed and water well and you will be rewarded with bright new shoots. Old plants can be regenerated by cutting out the old wood from the centre of the plant.

See our ultimate Dogwood hedging guide! for more information.

For more options, view our wonderful range of flowering hedge plants and our hedging for exposed sites.

Prices shown are the price per plant. Planting distances are very much a matter of choice - for bare roots, 3 plants per metre is adequate, 5 is good, 7 in a double staggered row will give a dense hedge quicker. Generally, smaller plants should be planted at higher density. Cell grown should be planted at 4 per metre in a single row or ideally 6 per metre in a staggered row. Planting density for pot grown plants is as shown below.

Cell grown and pot grown plants are available all year round. Bare roots are only available from november to late April/early May.

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