Columnar Mugo Pine — St. Paul, MN

Columnar Mugo Pine

#7 Gallon
$123.99
Sale price  $123.99 Regular price  $149.99
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Columnar Mugo Pine — St. Paul, MN

Columnar Mugo Pine

$123.99
Sale price  $123.99 Regular price  $149.99
Size#7 Gallon
🌸 Spring Sale — Save up to 18% on every plant
🚚Free delivery over $200
🌲Grown in Minnesota
🌱Pro installation available upon request
📞Questions? Text 612-214-1955
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Plant Survival Warranty
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Locally Owned
Twin Cities, MN
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100% MN-Hardy
Every plant proven in zone 4

A Narrow Columnar Mugo Pine for Tight Minnesota Spaces

Columnar Mugo Pine (Pinus mugo 'Columnaris') is the narrow vertical form of Minnesota's most reliable evergreen pine — mature 6–8 ft tall by just 2–3 ft wide. Reliable to -40°F and deer resistant. Perfect when you need vertical green structure in narrow side yards or tight foundation pockets.

Columnar Mugo Pine Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Pinus mugo 'Columnaris'
Common Names Columnar Mugo Pine
Mature Height 6–8 feet
Mature Width 2–3 feet
Growth Rate Slow — 4–6 inches per year
Sun Full sun (6+ hours)
Water Low to moderate.
USDA Zones 2–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a)
Soil Tolerates Minnesota clay-loam and sandy soils.
Foliage Evergreen — long dark-green needles in tight columnar habit
Winter Hardiness Reliable to -40°F.
Deer Resistance Deer-resistant.
Native Status European Alps species; columnar selection

Columnar Mugo Pine Uses in Minnesota Landscapes

Narrow Side Yards

Columnar Mugo's 2–3 ft mature width fits where almost no other evergreen will. Plant 3 feet apart for a slim narrow hedge or use as a vertical accent.

Tight Foundation Pockets

Anchors corners of foundation beds without overwhelming small Twin Cities yards. Pair with low spreading mugos for tiered effect.

Best Time to Plant Columnar Mugo Pine in Minnesota

Fall — late August through mid-September — is the ideal planting window for evergreens like Columnar Mugo Pine. Soil is still warm enough for root development, cool air reduces transplant shock, and the plant gets 6–8 weeks to establish roots before the typical mid-November ground freeze in the Twin Cities. The earlier window matters specifically for evergreens because they continue losing moisture through their needles all winter, so root establishment before freeze is critical.

Spring (late April through May, after ground thaw) is the second-best window — you get a full growing season ahead. Avoid summer planting (June–August) when possible; if you must, water heavily and mulch deeply. Never plant after mid-October or before late April, when frozen ground or frost-heaving will kill new roots.

How to Plant Columnar Mugo Pine

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width, same depth. In heavy clay, dig even wider (3–4x).
  2. Check for clay hardpan — if water pools in the hole, break through the clay layer or mound-plant 2–3 inches above grade to improve drainage.
  3. Backfill with native soil mixed with 20–30% compost. Don't fill the hole with pure compost — it creates a "container" effect that traps water around the roots.
  4. Spacing — 3 feet apart for narrow hedge; 4 feet for accent placements.
  5. Build a 3–4 inch water basin around the plant to direct water to the roots. Flatten or remove the basin in late October to prevent ice damage over winter.
  6. Mulch with 2–3 inches of shredded bark or wood chip mulch, kept 2 inches away from the trunk. Do NOT use gravel mulch — it doesn't insulate roots in Minnesota winters.

Watering Columnar Mugo Pine in Minnesota

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow (15–25 minutes)
  • Month 1–2: Every 3–4 days
  • Month 3–6: Every 5–7 days during active growth; less if rainfall is adequate (Minnesota averages roughly 3 inches/month June–August)
  • Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in Twin Cities metro). Continued late-fall watering can push tender new growth that gets killed by winter.
  • One deep watering in early December is a good idea for evergreens if fall has been dry — it helps the plant resist winter desiccation.

After Year One

  • Established Columnar Mugo Pine rarely needs supplemental water. Water deeply during droughts (2+ weeks of no rain combined with temps above 80°F).
  • Soak to 6–8 inches depth, every 7–14 days during dry spells. Let natural rainfall do the rest.

Drip Irrigation in Minnesota

Drip works well for Columnar Mugo Pine if your beds already have a system. Place emitters 12–18 inches from the trunk. Always blow out lines and shut off the timer by early October — frozen drip lines split.

Will Columnar Mugo survive a Minnesota winter?

Yes — rated to USDA zone 2 (-50°F).

Is it deer-resistant?

Yes.

How fast does it grow?

Slow — 4–6 inches per year.

You May Also Like

  • Slowmound Mugo Pine — Mounding mugo at the base contrasts the columnar form.
  • Sky Rocket Juniper — Tall narrow companion for layered vertical compositions.

How Many Columnar Mugo Pine Do I Need?

For a slim evergreen hedge in a narrow side yard, space Columnar Mugo 3 feet apart (the body's own hedge spacing; mature width 2–3 ft):

Run Length Plants Needed (3 ft spacing)
10 feet 4
20 feet 7
30 feet 10
40 feet 13–14

As a vertical accent, use singles at 4-foot spacing from neighbors, or a matched pair flanking a gate or garage corner.

Columnar Mugo Pine Season-by-Season in Minnesota

  • Spring: Upright "candles" of new growth push from every branch tip in May — pinch them by half if you want the column even tighter.
  • Summer: Long dark-green needles at their fullest; the slim column gives vertical structure without casting wide shade.
  • Fall: Color holds dark green while the rest of the yard turns — a steady exclamation point among falling leaves.
  • Winter: Evergreen to -40°F with branches stiff enough to shrug off snow load — vertical green structure all five months of a Twin Cities winter.

At a Glance

✔ Deer-Resistant   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Four-Season Interest

Plant It With

  • Slowmound Mugo Pine — the low mounding mugo at the base of the column for a classic two-tier pine composition.
  • Sky Rocket Juniper — a taller, silver-blue vertical to layer behind for a varied columnar skyline.
  • Dwarf Mugo Pine — the bulletproof cushion form that repeats the needle texture at knee height.
  • Blue Arrow Juniper — an equally narrow blue column; alternate the two for a slim green-and-blue hedge.

Is Columnar Mugo Pine Right for Your Yard?

Columnar Mugo is the answer for full-sun spots too narrow for any other evergreen — side yards, tight foundation corners, slim property-line runs — in any Minnesota soil, with deer resistance and -40°F hardiness built in. Not a fit if you need fast screening: at 4–6 inches a year it takes a decade to reach full height, so buy the largest size you can or choose an arborvitae where speed matters. It also sulks in shade.

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