Dark Light
Sourwood
Oxydendrum arboreum

Very happy to have some Sourwood on the Reserve for the honey bees! Sourwood honey is prized, even though the name of the tree is from the sour taste of the leaves. The nectar must be more sweet.

This is a very beautiful tree, with cool flowers that almost resemble lily-of-the-valley.

I read that Cherokee and Catawba tribes would use the shoots of the sourwood to make arrowshafts, however I’m not 100% sure if this is true.

Size: 30-60' tall
Family: Ericaceae (Heath Family)
Habitat: Moist to dry forests, forest edges, fields and roadsides, prefers acidic soils.
Identification: A medium-sized deciduous tree with a slender crown. Bark on mature trees is deeply furrowed. Leaves are alternate 3-5 in. long, elliptical with finely toothed margins, turning scarlet in the fall. Small, white, bell-shaped flowers in dropping curved racemes. Fruit is a small, woody erect capsule in one-sided drooping clusters.  Flowers June-July



All text and photos copyright © 2022 Middle Way Nature Reserve, unless noted.
Related Posts

American Sycamore

If you see a lot of white-barked large trees off in the distance, you can bet that there is a river or creek (or body of water) nearby!

Winged Sumac

If you can't get any lemons because of weather or supply chain issues, maybe just get out to the edge of some woods and harvest yourself a little sumac.