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Dogwood Winter
Fri May 30, 2003
Listen in RealAudio 
Folklore of the eastern United States tells gardeners not to plant until after the dogwood
trees have bloomed. The reason: Dogwood Winter, known regionally as Blackberry Winter. Hi, I'm
Bryan Yeaton, and this is The Weather Notebook.
Dogwood Winter generally arrives following an extended mid-spring warm spell and brings
several days of cold, cloudy, disagreeable weather, often accompanied by frost and perhaps a
flurry of snow. It usually occurs during May and coincides with the blooming of dogwood trees
and blackberry bushes, from which it derives its popular names.
Dogwood Winter appears to be one of several weather "singularities" -- one time events common
to North America, such as Indian Summer and January Thaw, but in a retrograde thermal
direction. As someone once described it: "It's spring, then suddenly winter returns."
The American, or flowering, ogwood ranges from Texas to Minnesota eastward to the Atlantic
shoreline from Florida to southern New England. This small tree, often as wide as it is tall,
favors the well-drained but moist, fertile sites of mixed hardwood forests and pine forest
edges.
Many gardeners believe that the safest time to plant cold-sensitive species, such as tomatoes,
comes in the returning warm weather following Dogwood Winter. Native Americans also watched
for dogwood blossoms as signs to begin planting crops.
The dogwood's beauty and utility have long been celebrated in North America. Early colonists
reportedly used every part of the dogwood except "the rustle of its leaves."
Thanks to our contributing writer, meteorologist Keith Heidorn. The Weather Notebook is a
production of the Mount Washington Observatory. Our support comes from Subaru of America and
The National Scie
Today's Links
Web-Page Links: The Weather Doctor\'s Almanac: Dogwood Winter
http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weather/almanac/arc2002/alm02may.htm
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