Bunchberry, Cornus canadensis, Monrovia Plant Bunchberry, A lush carpet-like groundcover is created by whorls of deeply veined, rich green leaves Showy white flowers among the foliage are followed by clust
Cornus canadensis - Wikipedia Common names include Canadian dwarf cornel, Canadian bunchberry, quatre-temps, crackerberry, and creeping dogwood [2][3] It is a creeping, rhizomatous perennial growing to about 20 centimetres (8 inches) tall
How to grow bunchberry dogwood - Homes Gardens Bunchberry dogwoods are ideal plants for those looking for ground cover options for a shaded or dappled situation, such as under large shrubs or trees Read on to discover how best to grow this resilient and shade-tolerant perennial
Bunchberry Vine: Tips On Caring For Bunchberry Dogwood - Gardening Know How Bunchberry (Cornus canadensis) ground cover is a petite ground-hugging perennial plant that reaches only 8 inches (20 cm ) at maturity and spreads by underground rhizomes It has a woody stem and four to seven leaves that are set up in a whorled pattern at the tip of the stem
How to Grow and Care for Creeping Dogwood Bunchberry Plants Bunchberry Dogwoods are probably the ultimate ground cover plants for growing in moist, woodland areas or in your shade garden These short, bright green plants only reach six inches tall, but they spread indefinately by rhizomes just below the soil surface From early May through September, they produce typical Dogwood blossoms
Bunchberry, Creeping Dogwood - Woodbrook Native Plant Nursery About the Bunchberry, Creeping Dogwood This deciduous groundcover, a member of the Dogwood Family, has the distinctive white bracts around its flower The plants are about 6 inches high and prefer shade with acid, gritty, somewhat damp but well drained soil Birds eat berries
Cornus canadensis - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden Cornus canadensis, commonly known as dwarf cornel or bunchberry, is a shrubby deciduous ground cover that typically grows to 4- 9” tall and spreads in the landscape by creeping rhizomes This dwarf species of dogwood produces the same shaped leaves and flowers found on the familiar Cornus florida tree except in smaller size
Cornus canadensis (Bunchberry) - Gardenia Attractive in flower or fruit, Cornus canadensis (Bunchberry) is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial forming a carpet of conspicuously veined, oval, glossy leaves, 1-2 in long (2-5 cm), borne in whorls atop erect stems Medium to dark green, the deciduous foliage turns showing wine-red to purple shades in the fall
Cornus canadensis (Bunchberry, Canadian Bunchberry, Canadian Dwarf . . . Bunchberry is a low-growing, deciduous, shrubby groundcover with leaves and flowers similar to the familiar flowering dogwood (Cornus florida) tree but smaller Native to mixed forests in Canada and the northern US, and in the Appalachians south to Virginia, it grows from spreading rhizomes