Dogwood Tree – Change in Bloom Colors
Q: I have a fifteen-year-old dogwood tree that has always had white blooms. This year it has produced pink ones. Why is this?
A: It’s not terribly unusual for a white-flowering dogwood to pop out a limb that has pink flowers.
Growers select just such limbs in a nursery, graft them to the trunks of small white-flowered dogwoods and thereby make pink-flowered dogwoods to sell to gardeners.

-
Advertisement
-
Follow Walter
-
Advertisement
-
-
December calendar
Time to pick a Christmas tree. The fewer green needles that come off in your hand...
Get The Checklist
-
-
-
name that plant
Post your puzzlers and help others with theirs.
Start Here
-
-
Trending Posts
-
1
Leafless, Dying Azalea
-
2
Websites with Good Information about Landscape Plants
-
3
Joro Spiders Can Extrude Silk for Up to 70 Feet
-
4
Armyworms Blown In From Florida
-
5
Endive – Escarole
-
1
Websites with Good Information about Landscape Plants
-
2
Leafless, Dying Azalea
-
3
Surprise Lily Won’t Bloom
-
4
Stinky Irises Caused By Borers
-
5
Not Asian Ambrosia Beetles Identification
-
-
Walter’s Bookshelf
Browse and purchase gardening books by Walter Reeves, plus select titles by other authors.
View books -
Popular topics
Soil Spring Summer Seed Winter Fall Flowers Weed Fertilizer Disease Shade Temperature Pots Oak Pine Pruning Mulch Watering Container Maple Compost Birds Herbicide Azalea Tomatoes Moisture Poison Pears Hydrangea Glyphosate Caterpillar Pests Cherry Roundup Irrigation Pesticide Pre-Emergent Stone Dogwood Peach Spider Pine Straw Greenhouse Magnolia Squash Squirrels Beans Lemon Travel Poisonous