CityView Magazine

April 2013

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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FEATURE What���s in a Name? Bryan Mims ponders the importance of the dogwood tree I By Bryan Mims had never given much thought to the origin of the name ���dogwood tree.��� Like turkey oaks or cattails or rabbit bush, I assumed some whimsical botanist must have found something in the tree that conjured images of the animal kingdom. The tree has always made a name for itself in my book as one of spring���s great fanfares of color. Its creamy petals make a splash in neighborhoods and parks and deep woods. Most dogwoods have white flowers ��� they���re the natural trees ��� while the pink dogwoods are mutants whose roots can be traced to 19th Century Pennsylvania. A white dogwood grows outside my kitchen window, and I eagerly wait for it to dress up in its springtime bridal veil. Fayetteville bills itself the ���City of Dogwoods,��� a slogan to which I have, in fact, given much thought. The phrase is as inviting to me as creamy petals adrift in a gentle spring rain. It portrays our city as a Southern Eden, abounding in natural beauty. I know, I know, for those of you who���ve seen too much of The Boulevard and Skibo Road, your eyes are rolling right about now. But in truth, you don���t need to look through rosecolored glasses to view Fayetteville as a floral wonderland. Consider a drive along the city���s Dogwood Trail. It courses like a vine through historic neighborhoods with luxuriant yards, many of them shaded by this authentic American tree ��� the dogwood. It���s the classic American tree, native to as many as 40 of our states. And it���s the classic North Carolina tree. The four petals of CityViewNC.com | 51

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