Plant with white flowers and red berries
Garden Shrubs with Red Berries
By
Peg Aloi
Peg Aloi
Peg Aloi is a professional gardener covering plants in various contexts, from recipes to heirloom orchard fruits. Her area of interest is the folklore of plants and herbs. She's worked as a garden designer for public housing, individual homes, and businesses, and gives workshops on various gardening topics.
Learn more about The Spruce's Editorial Process
Updated on 07/12/21
The Spruce / Autumn Wood
Shrubs with berries can be a wonderful addition to your garden. They can provide you or the local wildlife with food, and can liven up your garden's color palette with bright shades of red. Not all berries are edible, however. Learn to tell the difference between ornamental, inedible berries and edible berries, and learn which plants are safe for you, your family, your pets, and your backyard birds and squirrels.
Here are seven garden shrubs with red berries.
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01 of 07
Janet / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
This species of holly (Ilex verticillata) has the brightest red berries of all. If you've grown holly, you know it's necessary to have three shrubs total (two males and one female) in order to pollinate for berry production; if a female shrub is not pollinated it won't produce berries. "Red Sprite" is a good semi-dwarf variety that grows up to 5 feet tall, with good berry production. The birds will flock to your holly for the berries that may linger through spring... but alas, these berries should not be eaten by humans or pets as they can cause gastrointestinal distress and other reactions. This holly is deciduous and not evergreen, often the berries will remain after the leaves fall off.
- USDA Growing Zones: 3 to 9, cold and heat tolerant
- Berries: Edible to birds, mildly toxic to humans, cats, dogs
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to full sun
- Soil Needs: Rich, moist, well-drained slightly acidic soil
- Mature Size: 3' to 5' tall and wide
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02 of 07
Red Currants
Susanne Wiik / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
The red currant bush (Ribes rubrum) has translucent, glassy looking red berries that make a delicious jelly! The tart berries are also a tasty snack for songbirds. The berries also come in a white variety that is somewhat sweeter than the red ones. Native to Europe, this shrub is widely cultivated for its fruit, which is rich in vitamin C. The famous Linzer torte of Austria typically uses red currant jelly for its filling. Red currents are rich in vitamins B and C, and like most berries, full of beneficial fiber.
- USDA Growing Zones: 3 to 5 (very cold hardy)
- Berries: Edible
- Sun Exposure: Morning sun, afternoon shade
- Soil Needs: Rich, moist, well-drained soil with added compost
- Mature Size: 3' to 5' tall
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03 of 07
Sara Rall / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
Red chokeberry (Aronia arbutifolia) is native to eastern Canada and the eastern and central United States. With its white flowers in spring, glossy red berries in summer, and gorgeous red autumn foliage, it has three seasons of visual interest. The flowers in spring attract butterflies. The fleshy berries attract birds from late fall through winter. The shrub, akin to a small tree, is upright and tends to put out suckers. The berries have a sour, astringent taste, used to make jams, wine, candy, syrup and other foods. They can be eaten raw but most people find them a bit too sour to enjoy in their natural state.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 9, cold and heat tolerant
- Berries: Edible to birds
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to full sun
- Soil Needs: Rich, moist, well-drained slightly acidic soil
- Mature Size: 5' to 10' high, 3' to 5' wide
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04 of 07
Linden Viburnum
Nan / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
This deciduous deer-resistant shrub, native to eastern Asia, was introduced to the mid-Atlantic states in the early 1800s. The Linden viburnum (Viburnum dilatatum), also known as linden arrowwood, is named for the leaves which resemble linden tree leaves. It puts out clusters of small white flowers in spring followed by dense clusters of red berries in autumn, which gradually turn a blackish red color in winter. Birds eat the berries in winter. In autumn the leaves turn shades of red and copper. There are various cultivars which differ somewhat in shape and form, including "Iroquois," "Oneida," "Michael Dodge," and "Mt. Airy." It grows somewhat aggressively, forming dense thickets quickly if not controlled, and is considered an invasive species in Massachusetts.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5a to 8b, somewhat cold tolerant
- Berries: Edible to birds
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade to full sun
- Soil Needs: Well-drained slightly acidic soil, tolerant of clay soils
- Mature Size: 8' to 10' high and wide
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05 of 07
Susanne Nilsson / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0
This beautiful upright shrub is native to much or Europe, hence its other common name European Spindle. The spindle tree (Euonymus europaeus) bears red fruits attractive to birds and the birds help this plant reseed widely so it has a reputation for being somewhat invasive. The small white flowers in spring are unremarkable, but the colorful pink-red capsules that open to reveal orange seeds are showy and distinctive in autumn, along with the shift of the leaves' colors, ranging from yellow to reddish purple.
- USDA Growing Zones: 4 to 7, cold tolerant
- Berries: Edible to birds
- Sun Exposure: Partial shade to full sun
- Soil Needs: Moist, well-drained soil; tolerates alkaline soil
- Mature Size: 12' to 20' high, 2' to 3' feet wide
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06 of 07
Cotoneaster
Mark Ness / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
Cotoneaster shrubs hail from China, Europe, temperate Asia and North Africa. They have been cultivated in various regions for their value as a larval plant food for butterflies and as a nectar source for bees. They make an attractive landscape shrub, are strong and hardy, and the red berries attract blackbirds and thrushes. Some of the more popular cultivars are "Coral Beauty," "Queen of Carpets," "Juliette," and "Pink Champagne." They come in various sizes and forms also, from low-growing ground covers to tall hedges. Most of them bear white flowers in spring and feature colorful autumn foliage as the red berries appear.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 8
- Berries: Edible to birds, but slightly toxic to humans
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to full sun
- Soil Needs: Rich, moist, well-drained soil; tolerant of acid or alkaline soils
- Mature Size: varies with variety (ground cover to 6' hedge)
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07 of 07
Strawberry Tree
Andre Lopes / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
This broadleaf evergreen shrub has four seasons of visual interest for the garden. Native to France, Ireland and the Mediterranean region, the strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo) is also known as Dalmatian strawberry or cane apples. It's a popular garden shrub for its attractive berries, but these fruits, while edible, are rather bland and mealy. The strawberry tree develops an attractive twisted and gnarled in appearance as it matures. It displays fragrant bell-shaped white flowers in the fall. If bees pollinate the flowers, they will form the fruits that appear in winter, first yellow, then red. This is a very pest and disease resistant shrub as well.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 10 (not cold hardy)
- Berries: Edible to birds
- Sun Exposure: Partial sun to full sun
- Soil Needs: Rich, moist, slightly acidic, well-drained soil
- Mature Size: 6' to 15' tall
When choosing shrubs or trees with ornamental berries, it's important to determine whether any parts of the plant are toxic and might be harmful to your family, pets or local wildlife. A berry or fruit that is edible for birds may not be safe for other animals, so do some research before buying and planting.
18 Shrubs with Red Berries to Consider Growing
by Jennifer Poindexter
Do you need new shrubs around your home? Would you like a shrub which produces color or even beautiful berries?
You’ve landed in the right spot. I’m going to walk you through a few options for shrubs which produce red berries and add a vibrant splash of color during certain parts of the year. I’ll share with you which planting zones and growing conditions the shrubs grow best in.
Don’t feel overwhelmed when trying to narrow down your options for this style of bush. Instead, utilize this list and tips to help you choose the perfect shrubs for your planting area.
Here are your options for shrubs which produce red berries.
1. Red Heavenly Bamboo
If you’re in the market for a mid-size shrub that produces red berries and has vibrantly colored leaves, red heavenly bamboo could be for you.
This shrub grows to be between four and eight feet tall. It prefers nutrient dense soil that’s also well-draining. You should grow red heavenly bamboo in full sunlight and in planting zones six through nine.
2. Buffalo Berry
The buffalo berry bush has foliage which reminds me of sage. However, the shrub produces vibrant red berries. This bush is hardy in zones two through nine, prefers full sun, and isn’t picky about soil types.
Be mindful that this shrub can grow anywhere from three feet tall to twenty feet tall. Ensure you have the room for it prior to planting.
3. Red Elderberry
Elderberry bushes produce gorgeous fruit that’s edible. This would be a great choice for someone who is trying to grow an edible landscape.
If you’d like to grow red elderberries around your home, be sure you plant them in full sunlight and well-draining soil. These bushes are hardy in planting zones three through seven.
4. Butcher’s Broom
The butcher’s broom shrub is small in comparison to some of the other choices mentioned on this list. This plant only reaches heights of one to three feet and is a hardy option for planting zones seven through nine.
If you choose to plant this shrub, ensure it’s surrounded by shade and any type of well-draining soil. This is a drought-tolerant and sturdy choice of bush to add to your landscape.
5. Snake Berries
This next plant may not be considered a shrub by everyone, but it deserves a mention on this list. The plant is known as snake berries or sometimes called Indian mock strawberries. The reason being is the plant looks just like a strawberry plant.
However, the berries are round and have small bumps all over them. If interested, you can grow this plant in full to partial sunlight. It’s hardy in planting zones five through nine.
6. Red Chokeberry Bush
Chokeberries can put on quite the show. This shrub has bright green foliage and produces dark red berries. During the fall, the leaves become a rich red.
If you’re interested in growing the red chokeberry bush, it’s hardy in planting zones four through nine. This shrub can grow to be six to twelve feet tall. However, it needs rich soil that’s well-draining.
7. Winterberry
The winterberry bush is another great plant for many landscapes. This shrub grows to be approximately twenty-four feet tall and twelve feet around.
Winterberry thrives in planting zones four through eight. It naturally grows in bogs, so try to recreate this in your growing space. The shrub can handle full to partial sunlight. However, it does need moist soil that’s also acidic.
8. Hobblebush
The hobblebush is a smaller shrub that likes to spread out lower to the ground. It grows to become approximately six feet tall.
The bush produces green foliage, white blooms, and red berries. It likes damp soil that’s sandy and acidic. This plant is hardy in planting zones six and higher.
9. Red Gooseberry Bush
Sometimes people like to grow shrubs for their beauty. Other times, they want to grow them for their functionality. This might be the case if you grow red gooseberries.
You can grow this plant in full to partial sunlight. However, the more sunlight the plant receives the more the plant should produce. This plant is hardy in zones three through eight.
10. Sumac
Sumac is sometimes considered a bush and, in some cases, a small tree. Whichever category you place it in, it could still make a great addition to your home.
This shrub is hardy in planting zones five through eight. It isn’t picky as far as soil goes as long as it drains adequately. This plant can also handle full to partial sunlight.
11. Barberry
Barberry is a smaller shrub which comes in an array of colors ranging from green to dark red. It also produces elongated, small red berries. If you’re interested in adding this shrub to your home or garden, it’s hardy in planting zones four through eight.
This plant prefers loamy, well-draining soil and can handle full to partial sunlight. However, the warmer the climate, the more shade the shrub needs.
12. Cotoneaster
Cotoneaster is an eye-catching shrub. It matures to heights ranging from five to seven feet tall and is hardy in planting zones five through eight.
If you need a shrub with deep green foliage and red berries, you don’t want to overlook this option. It can handle most soils as long as they’re well-draining, and the plant needs full to partial sunlight as well.
13. Raspberry
Raspberry bushes are another plant most people grow for their functionality instead of their looks. However, with the right pruning, this plant could be a great selection for an edible landscape.
This style of plant can grow to be between five and six feet tall. It needs full sunlight, well-draining soil, and it’s vital that the soil is nutrient dense. Raspberries are a great choice because they’re hardy in planting zones three through ten.
14. Redcurrants
Do you want a bush that creates both beauty and provides a functional product? You should consider growing redcurrants.
Redcurrants are wonderful for making jam or using in smoothies. If you’re interested in growing this plant, it’s hardy in zones three through eight. It only needs full sun and nutrient rich, well-draining soil.
15. Tatarian Honeysuckle Bush
The Tatarian honeysuckle bush has green foliage and colorful blooms. The blooms will eventually produce red berries. It can become invasive, so be mindful as to how and where you plant this bush.
This honeysuckle bush can grow in full sun or shade, and it isn’t particular about soil types. It’s also hardy in planting zones three through eight.
16. Bittersweet Nightshade
The bittersweet nightshade can be grown vertically as a vine or pruned to be a bush. This plant will grow to be between two and eight feet tall depending upon how you prune.
If you’re interested in growing bittersweet nightshade, it’s hardy in planting zones four and higher. It isn’t particular about growing conditions as it’s considered invasive in many areas. It’s also toxic so take this into consideration prior to planting.
17. Bunchberry
The bunchberry bush looks very quaint. It produces leaves in groups of five. From there, small blooms appear in the center.
When growing this plant, ensure it’s planted where it will receive full shade or only morning light. It needs rich, well-draining soil as well. This is a hardy bush for planting zones two through seven.
18. Wild Coffee
The wild coffee bush has elongated leaves which produce small red berries. This is an edible plant but also makes a wonderful option to border your garden areas.
If you choose to grow this shrub, ensure it’s only planted in shaded growing spaces. The foliage can’t handle full sunlight. It also must have well-draining soil. Wild coffee is only hardy in planting zones nine through eleven.
This concludes our list of shrubs which produce red berries. Whether you’re looking for a shrub that produces fruit you can eat or a basic bush to add a splash of color during certain parts of the year, this list should have you covered.
Be sure to review the facts shared about each plant. Ensure you plant in the right planting zone and provide the right growing conditions. Hopefully, this list will inspire you as you’re creating a new look for your landscape.
More About Shrubs with Red Berries
https://gardeningsolutions. ifas.ufl.edu/plants/trees-and-shrubs/shrubs/wild-coffee.html
https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/cornus-canadensis/
https://extension.umn.edu/fruit/growing-raspberries-home-garden
name? the bush blooms with white flowers smelling of jasmine, red berries ripen - Question
OM
Oleg Martynov
- name
- berry
NV
Nadezhda Varuntseva
muraya
Victor
Murraya
Sergey
nine0002 "tree of Japanese emperors" - muraya. She is both beautiful and easy to care for, and the smell of flowers! . But this smell is not simple…The healing properties of muraya have been known to man for a very long time - since the time of the ancient Egyptian dynasties. For the rulers of that world, the priests prepared a medicinal drink from its leaves, fruits and flowers, which was considered the “elixir of life”.
This is a mountain plant, so it is well suited to fresh moist air, does not like excessive moisture in the soil, heat. Prefers a bright, but not hot place. nine0031 Dishes should be small, and watering should be plentiful, but rare enough - only on well-dry ground.
As the root system grows, the plants are transplanted into a slightly larger dish. It is important not to deepen the root neck.
Muraya is developing quite fast. Already in 3 - 4 months, some specimens bloom.
Flowering
Flowering period - almost all year round.
Fruiting
The fruit is a berry, 1-1.5 cm in diameter. The berries are tied without pollination, grow and ripen for about four months. According to the degree of ripening, the fruits have a different color - from orange and slightly lilac to dark red in a ripe state. Small fruits have a round stone, in large ones it is divided into two halves, which then give two plants. Fruits with amazing dotted depressions on the surface, as if mahogany inlay, minted in the temple of the craftswoman nature. The fruits have a complex, slightly sweet, specific, spicy taste. It is worth chewing a berry at the end of a tiring day of work, as you immediately feel a surge of strength and vigor. The fruits are slightly reminiscent of hawthorn in shape and color, contain many biologically active substances. At the same time, flowers and ovaries can be on the bush. This evergreen wonder is often referred to as "muraya exotica". Indeed, bright green leaves, snow-white, very fragrant clusters of flowers and ruby berries give the tree a special splendor. nine0003
Alexey Ivanov
Carissa
AI
Alina Ivanova
Jasmine
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names and photos of plants with sour and bitter, small and large
An original shrub with red berries can decorate any garden plot. This is a real benefit and original natural beauty for the garden. A huge selection of cultivated plants with bitter and sour, large and small berries will fit into any design in an original way and become a bright accent spot.
The most famous shrub with red bitter berries is viburnum, which has exquisite external beauty and a lot of useful and medicinal properties. Another shrub with red sour berries is also widely distributed in household plots. This is a red currant. The third culture is not quite a shrub type, but it can be formed in a similar way. It's about rowan. nine0003
Prickly shrub with red berries - euonymus, dogwood, gooseberry, etc. You can find out all the names of such cultures and see them in the photo further on this page. Their combination will help to get the most out of the backyard and at the same time give the territory an unusual and aesthetically attractive appearance. But be careful - some shrubs with red berries are potentially dangerous to human life and health. In no case should you plant wolfberries in your garden. nine0003
Red-fruited cotoneaster garden shrubs
Common cotoneaster This red-fruited garden shrub is not particularly popular, although it tolerates winters and heat well. Tall stems are pubescent, but over time, the coating disappears. The leaves are broad and rounded. The flowers are white with a pink tint, collected in inflorescences. Berries are bright red.
Cotoneaster is a horizontal or creeping evergreen shrub with a vigorous crown. The foliage is oval, green in color, and by autumn it becomes orange-red. The berries are bright pink and can hang all winter. This species is demanding on the quality of the soil. nine0003
Dummer's cotoneaster. This shrub with red berries grows wild mainly in mountainous areas. The stems also creep and because of this are prone to self-rooting. The height does not exceed 30 cm, but the width is very voluminous.
Foliage is small, round, turning purple in autumn. Inflorescences of a reddish tone. The fruits are pink, also remain on the branches for a long time and have a beautiful appearance.
Has a hybrid variety of Coral Beauty that is slightly taller than the original plant and has increased winter hardiness. nine0003
Cotoneaster multiflorum grows over 2 meters. The stems are slightly pubescent, but become bare with age. The young foliage of a shrub with red berries has a grayish color, turns green by summer, and turns red by autumn. The flowers are relatively large, form large inflorescences. The fruits are bright red.
Generally good frost tolerance, but not as hardy as Brilliant. Demanding on the nutritional value of the soil.
Cotoneaster Alaunsky - this shrub with red berries is listed in the Red Book. Widespread in mountains or river valleys. It grows up to 2 meters, has small pink flowers, and its fruits are red at first, and then change color to black. nine0003
Hawthorn - healing and aesthetic effect
Hawthorn - a large shrub with red berries or a small tree up to 5 m high (sometimes 10-12 m high) Young branches are purple-brown, shiny, covered with sparse, thick, straight spines up to 4 cm long. Its healing and aesthetic effect makes the plant widespread in horticultural culture.
Leaves are alternate, obovate or broadly rhombic with a wedge-shaped base, pointed, shallowly three-seven-lobed serrate, shortly pubescent on both sides, 2-6 cm long, located on short petioles. The color is dark green in summer, orange-red in autumn. nine0003
Flowers with five petals, white or slightly pink, connected in dense corymbose inflorescences 4-5 cm in diameter. They have a slight specific smell.
Fruits of a shrub with red berries - berries of spherical or slightly oblong shape with a remaining calyx, diameter 8-10 mm., with 3-4 stones containing 1 seed. The pulp is mealy. The color, depending on the species, is blood-red, brownish, orange, pink, yellow or black. The taste is sweet and sour.
Common barberry - characteristics and interesting varieties
This type of barberry grows mainly in Central and Southern Europe, and these fluffy bushes can also be seen in the North Caucasus. The height of the plant, as a rule, does not exceed 1.5 m. The flowers of the shrub with red yagshods are yellow and white, begin to bloom in the last decade of May, in some areas in early June. The duration of flowering is average - 13-20 days. Ideal for backyard or vegetable garden. The shrub tolerates a haircut well. Not picky about the choice of location: it can grow both in partial shade and in illuminated areas. Among other things, the common barberry can easily endure even severe frosts. This variety of barberry is suitable for eating. This is a small characteristic of the culture, then we will consider interesting varieties. nine0003
Common barberry has not so many varieties. The most popular of them are the following:
- Barberry Juliana Barberry "Juliana" ("Jilianae") - the bush grows up to 3 meters. The leaves become bright red in autumn;
- Barberry "Aureomarginata" ("Aureomarginata") - a bush up to 1.5 m high. The leaves are rich green in color with a golden border. It is desirable that this variety grows in a lighted area. Otherwise, the decorative coloring disappears; nine0010
- Thunberg's barberry is no less decorative.
It grows wild on the slopes of China and Japan. The plant reaches a height of 1.5 m. In spring and summer, barberry leaves have a yellowish or bright red tint, and with the approach of autumn - brown. Thunberg barberry flowers are usually yellow with a red border around the edges. Compared with the common barberry, this variety does not bloom for long - only 8-12 days. The plant tolerates both cold and drought well, it is not demanding on the soil. The fruits have a bitter taste and therefore are not used in food. nine0003
A well-known shrub with red berries - wild rose
Rosehip (lat. Rósa) is a genus of wild plants of the Rosaceae family. It has many cultural forms bred under the name Rosa. This is a well-known thorny shrub with red berries, which grows in abundance in gardens and park areas, in forests and in summer cottages.
- Deciduous shrub, usually 1-5 meters high. Sometimes there are low tree-like forms.
- Shoots covered with thorns. nine0010
- Leaves pinnate, with paired stipules (rarely simple and without stipules), containing 5-7 leaflets.
- Flowers usually pale pink, 4-6 cm in diameter. There are forms with flowers that show signs of doubleness.
False fruit (hypanthium), oval or ovoid-spherical, red, orange, purplish-red when ripe, with numerous nuts inside. The color of hypanthium is due to the high content of carotenes. The fruits ripen in October. nine0003
Since ancient times, rose hips have been used in folk medicine for gum bleeding. A decoction was also prepared from the wild rose to restore strength. Healing tinctures were prepared from the leafy and root parts of the wild rose. Rosehip syrup with honey was drunk for inflammatory diseases and ulcers in the oral cavity.
Common raspberry and well-known
Common raspberry is a thorny shrub with red berries, characterized by branching. It has a perennial rhizome and is characterized by erect shoots that can reach two meters in height. This is a well-known culture for the garden and vegetable garden. nine0003
In the first year, the shoots are fluffy and only their lower part is covered with small and thin brown thorns. In the second year, they become strong and begin to bear fruit, after which they dry up, and new shoots grow from the rhizome and the two-year life cycle begins anew.
The plant itself not only brings delicious fruits, but also has an attractive appearance, so the photo of common raspberry is popular. On the relatively long petioles of the shrub, there are pinnate, compound and alternate leaves, having an average of five to seven leaflets, the upper of which are trifoliate and have stipules. The white flowers of the common raspberry are small and have five petals. nine0003
The red, ruby fruits of the culture are a combined drupe, in crops bred by breeders, the berry may have a yellow color. The seeds are round and very small, but hard.
The crop blooms in June-July, and the fruits begin to ripen around July-August. Common raspberry bears fruit over the years is unstable. The yield is affected by the weather: cold and rainy weather prevents the necessary pollination by insects. Reproduction of common raspberries occurs vegetatively or by seeds. nine0003
Common cranberry - creeping shrub
Common cranberry (Vaccinium oxycoccos) is another creeping shrub with red bitter berries that you can grow in your garden.
- Taxon: family Heathers (Ericaceae)
- Other names: swamp cranberry, four-leafed cranberry, vaccinium, bearberry, swamp grapes
- In English: Craneberry, Bearberries
sharp, sour and coccus - spherical, which means "sour ball", "sour berry", to the taste of the fruit. The old specific name comes from the Latin palustris - marsh. nine0003
The first European settlers called the cranberry "Craneberry" (literally "crane berry"), because the open flowers on the stems reminded them of the neck and head of a crane. In 17th century New England, cranberries were sometimes called "Bearberries" because people often saw bears eating them.
Common cranberry is an evergreen shrub with red berries and creeping, thin shoots up to 80 cm long. The stems are flexible, lignified, dark brown, with ascending flower-bearing twigs and short filiform fluffy annual twigs. The leaves are alternate, leathery, shiny, dark green, glaucous below from a wax coating and in places with small glandular hairs. Leaves 5-16 mm long, 2-6 mm wide, on short petioles, oblong-ovate, sharp at the apex with entire wrapped edges. The flowers of cranberries are pink-red, drooping, arranged one by one or more often collected in 2-4, less often 6 in umbellate inflorescences on last year's branches. Pedicels long, calyx with four sepals, corolla deeply four-parted, 5-7 mm long, 1.5-2 mm wide. Blossoms in May-June, the fruits ripen in late August and September. The size of a berry grown in a swamp reaches 16 mm. nine0003
Common cranberries often grow together with another species - small-fruited cranberries (Vaccinium microcarpum). In Russia, small-fruited cranberries are considered as an independent species, however, in international botanical databases, they are often included in the synonymy of the species Vaccinium oxycoccos. All parts of this plant are smaller, the diameter of the berries is 4-6 mm.
Common dogwood - a luxurious garden bush
It is very difficult to confuse the sweet and sour taste of dogwood jam: it is familiar to many from childhood. Common dogwood is widely popular with gardeners in our country due to its unpretentious care, easy cultivation and variety of varieties. More than 50 kg of berries can be harvested from one luxurious dogwood garden bush
In the late autumn, while picking mushrooms in the forest, people saw a bush full of bright red sweet-tasting berries. They took the shrub to their garden. And for a long time after that they made fun of the shaitan, and he decided to take revenge. The following year, the dogwood gave people a generous harvest, but in order for it to ripen, the sun spent all its strength. Therefore, the winter was severe and frosty. Since then, the second name of dogwood is shaitan-berry, and there is a sign among the people: a rich harvest of dogwood promises a harsh winter.
Common dogwood is a short spreading shrub with red fruits or a tree 2-5 m high. Dogwood usually grows as a shrub in the garden to make it easier to harvest. Shoots are easy to form, forming a regular round-pyramidal crown. nine0003
Flowering of the shrub comes early: in the middle lane dogwood blossoms from March 30 to April 20. A sudden cold snap or return spring frosts are not terrible for dogwood flowers. In frost, the flowers shrink and in this state they hold until the onset of heat. Flowering in dogwood lasts 12-15 days, at the end of which the shrub releases leaves.