Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) — Maplewood, MN

Jack Pine

5' B&B
$301.99
Sale price  $301.99 Regular price  $366.99
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Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) — Maplewood, MN

Jack Pine

$301.99
Sale price  $301.99 Regular price  $366.99
Size5' B&B
🌸 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
Optional season-long protection
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Locally Owned
Twin Cities, MN
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100% MN-Hardy
Every plant proven in zone 4

Minnesota's Toughest Native Pine for Sandy, Dry Sites

Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) is a hardy native of Minnesota's northern forests, famous for thriving where little else will - dry, sandy, and infertile ground. It grows into an irregular, characterful pine 30-50 feet tall, with short paired needles and a rugged, wind-sculpted form. An excellent, low-input choice for windbreaks, restoration, and wildlife habitat.

Jack Pine Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Pinus banksiana
Common Names Jack Pine
Mature Height 30-50 feet
Mature Width 20-30 feet
Growth Rate Moderate to fast - 12-24 inches per year
Sun Full sun (6+ hours)
Water Low once established; excellent drought tolerance.
USDA Zones 2-6 (Twin Cities is zone 4b-5a)
Soil Thrives in sandy, dry, poor soils where other conifers fail; also tolerates Minnesota clay-loam.
Foliage Evergreen - short, slightly twisted needles in pairs
Winter Hardiness Reliable to -50F.
Deer Resistance Moderate to good - deer largely avoid mature pines, though tender new growth may be nibbled.
Native Status Native to Minnesota's northern forests

Jack Pine Uses in Minnesota Landscapes

Windbreaks and Tough-Site Screens

Jack Pine is the conifer to reach for when the site is hard. It grows fast and dense on poor, sandy, dry ground where most evergreens would fail, making it ideal for windbreaks and screens on rural-edge and outer-ring metro properties. Space the trees 12-15 feet apart in a row for a quick, rugged wind and privacy barrier.

Restoration and Wildlife Plantings

As a Minnesota native and a classic pioneer species, Jack Pine is a natural choice for naturalized, restoration, and wildlife plantings. It provides cover and seed for native birds and animals and helps stabilize and reclaim disturbed or sandy ground in a way few other trees can.

Drought-Tough Native for Sandy Soils

Few trees handle dry, sandy soil like Jack Pine - it actually prefers the lean, fast-draining ground common in Minnesota's northern and eastern metro and shrugs off heat and drought once established. Use it on a hot, sandy slope or a problem corner in Woodbury or Maple Grove where richer plants struggle.

Best Time to Plant Jack Pine in Minnesota

As an evergreen, Jack Pine establishes best when planted in late summer to early fall - late August through mid September is the ideal Twin Cities window, giving roots time to settle before the ground freezes and reducing winter desiccation. Spring (late April through May, after the ground thaws) is the strong second choice. Avoid midsummer planting, and never plant after mid-October or before the ground thaws.

How to Plant Jack Pine

  1. Dig the hole two to three times as wide as the root ball but no deeper - Jack Pine is happiest with sharp drainage, so do not plant it low in heavy clay.
  2. Check for clay hardpan: if water pools in the bottom of the hole, break through the compacted layer or mound-plant. This pine truly prefers dry feet.
  3. Backfill with the native soil; in heavy clay, mix in 20-30% compost or coarse grit to improve drainage. It does not need rich soil.
  4. Give a specimen room - 15-20 feet - or space windbreak trees 12-15 feet apart in a row.
  5. Build a 3-4 inch watering basin around the root zone for the first season, then flatten it before winter to prevent ice damage.
  6. Mulch with 2-3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips, kept a couple of inches back from the trunk. Do not use gravel mulch - it offers no winter insulation in Minnesota.

Watering Jack Pine in Minnesota

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1-2: water deeply every 1-2 days, soaking the root ball slowly.
  • Month 1-2: water every 3-4 days.
  • Month 3 onward: water every 5-7 days, easing off quickly - this pine resents soggy soil and prefers to dry out between waterings.
  • Stop watering 2-3 weeks before the ground freezes (late October in the metro). A single deep soak in early December helps if fall was dry, since evergreens lose moisture all winter.

After Year One

  • Established trees are exceptionally drought-tolerant and rarely need supplemental water at all.
  • Water only during prolonged drought, and let natural rainfall do the rest.

Will Jack Pine survive a Minnesota winter?

Without question. It is hardy to roughly -50F (USDA zone 2) and native to Minnesota's northern forests - one of the toughest, most cold-hardy trees you can plant.

What kind of soil does Jack Pine need?

It prefers lean, sandy, dry soil and thrives where richer plants fail. It also tolerates Minnesota clay-loam as long as the site drains - just avoid planting it in a low, soggy spot.

Is Jack Pine native to Minnesota?

Yes. It is native across Minnesota's northern forests and sandy pine barrens, which makes it a top choice for native, wildlife, and restoration plantings.

Is Jack Pine deer-resistant?

Moderately. Deer largely leave mature pines alone but may nibble tender new growth on young trees, especially in winter. In high-pressure suburbs like Minnetonka and Wayzata, protect young trees for the first couple of winters.

You May Also Like

  • Uncle Fogy Jack Pine - a quirky weeping selection of this same native pine for a sculptural accent.
  • Scotch Pine - another tough, fast pine for windbreaks and dry sites.
  • White Spruce - a hardy native spruce for denser windbreaks and screens.
  • Norway Spruce - a fast, large spruce for a bold windbreak or specimen.

How Many Jack Pine Do I Need?

For a windbreak or rugged screen, space Jack Pine 12–15 feet apart in a row:

Run length Trees at 12–15 ft spacing
50 feet 4 trees
100 feet 7–8 trees
200 feet 14–16 trees

For a denser two-row windbreak, stagger a second row 15 feet behind the first. A single specimen needs 15–20 feet of clearance.

Jack Pine Season-by-Season in Minnesota

  • Spring: Pale candles of new growth push from every branch tip; small cones begin forming on older trees.
  • Summer: Short, twisted olive-green needle pairs handle heat and drought on sandy ground without flinching.
  • Fall: Evergreen color holds as deciduous neighbors drop; the irregular, wind-sculpted silhouette stands out.
  • Winter: Full evergreen presence and dense cover for chickadees, finches, and grouse; hardy to roughly -50°F with zero protection.

At a Glance

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

Plant It With

  • Uncle Fogy Jack Pine — the weeping, sculptural form of the same bulletproof native species.
  • Scotch Pine — another fast, tough pine to mix into a windbreak row.
  • White Spruce — a denser native spruce layer for a more wind-tight screen.
  • Norway Spruce — fast, massive structure for the outer row of a big windbreak.

Is Jack Pine Right for Your Yard?

Choose Jack Pine if you have a hot, dry, sandy, or infertile site in full sun — a problem slope, rural windbreak line, or restoration planting — and you want a fast, native, zero-coddling evergreen. It's not the right pick for a manicured front yard or a soggy low spot: its form is irregular and rugged rather than tidy, and it resents wet feet, so choose White Spruce for moist sites or a formal look.

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