Fall Dogwood Blooms No Cause For Alarm
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Don’t be alarmed if your dogwood trees bloom in September. Just enjoy it, a forester with the University of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service said Monday.
Larry Tankersley said fall blooms sometimes occur when the length of late summer days confuses young dogwoods. But fall blooms are no threat to the trees.
“I get a few calls every year from people wondering why their dogwoods are blooming. Basically, its a hormone problem in the immature trees,” Tankersley said. “The length of days now is almost identical to that of the spring.
“The hormones read the daylight as a signal to flower, and hormones that control that response are not yet full grown.”
Within a few years, the trees’ hormones are balanced and late blooming stops, Tankersley said.
Blooming in the fall does not harm the young dogwoods, but it could mean fewer blooms in the spring, he said.
“It’s just one of those neat things that nature does every now and then. It may happen to other plants but the dogwoods are more showy, so we notice it more in them.”
____
Contact: Larry Tankersley(423-974-7977)
Related Posts
- Dry Weather Stresses Area Dogwood Trees (September 10, 1998)
- Dry Weather Stresses Area Dogwood Trees (155) (September 10, 1998)
- Dogwood Bloom May Be Early (290) (February 28, 1997)
- Mild Weather Won’t Trick Native Trees and Plants (250) (February 27, 1998)
- Local Blooms Survive Cold Snap (March 14, 2000)
- Rainfall May Improve Fall Foliage Color (September 27, 2000)
- Dogwood Developers Win UT Tech Transfer Prize (October 19, 2007)
- Gardening Tips to Attract Butterflies (130) (May 27, 1997)



