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Cornus sericea
The Red Osier Dogwood (Cornus sericea, syn. C. stolonifera, Swida sericea) is a species of dogwood native throughout northern and western North America from Alaska east to Newfoundland, south to Durango and Nuevo León in the west, and Illinois and Virginia in the east. Other names include Red Willow, Kinnikinnick, Redstem Dogwood, Redtwig Dogwood, Red-rood, American Dogwood, Creek Dogwood, and (subsp. occidentalis) Western Dogwood. The branches and twigs are dark red, although wild plants may lack this coloration in shaded areas. The leaves are opposite, 5–12 cm long and 2.5–6 cm broad, with an ovate to oblong shape and an entire margin; they are dark green above and glaucous below; fall color is commonly bright red to purple. The flowers are small (5–10 mm diameter), dull white, in clusters 3–6 cm diameter. The fruit is a globose white berry 5–9 mm diameter.
In the wild, it commonly grows in areas of damp soil, such as wetlands. It is a medium to tall deciduous shrub, growing 1.5–4 m tall and 3–5 m wide, spreading readily by underground stolons to form dense thickets.
Cornus sericea is a popular ornamental shrub that is often planted for the red coloring of its twigs in the dormant season. Native Americans used the berries as food, both fresh and dried and cooked. Some Plateau Indian tribes ate the berries to treat colds and slow bleeding. Known as cansasa in Lakota, the inner bark of the red osier dogwood was also used by the Lakota and other Native Americans as "traditional tobacco", either by itself or in a mixture with other plant materials.[Among the Algonquian peoples such as the Ojibwe, the smoking mixtures, known as kinnikinnick, blended the inner bark with tobacco, while more western tribes added it to the bearberry leaf to improve the taste. The Ojibwe used Red Osier Dogwood bark as a dye by taking the inner bark, mixing it with other plants or minerals. Took this picture while hiking in the Northern Bruce Peninsula in August. This patch was not the only one in the vicinity. Beautiful trail, as an added note. Lots of moss.
ooks like the Cornus to me too. Wrong leaf shape for Sambucus canadenis too
I think this is a type of Dogwood, Cornus sp. I think the Elderberry fruit is much darker.
The contrast in the photo has not been adjusted, although my camera settings are set to boost color when taking a photo. However, the colors were just as striking when I was hiking and viewed this plant, which is why I took the picture in the first place. Thanks for your suggestions, I'm open to others, and will update if I figure out what it is.
The colors of this pic appear pretty much pushed in contrast - the green as well as the red twigs.
If they're real my suggest might be false.
If the colors are tweaked, please keep in mind for further spottings that any alternation of an unknown species will make it harder to identify.