Jim Dandy Winterberry
The Pollinator Partner That Loads Your Winterberries with Berries
Jim Dandy Winterberry (Ilex verticillata 'Jim Dandy') is a compact male winterberry whose only job is the most important one in the bed: it pollinates your berry-producing female winterberries so they explode with color each fall. It carries no berries itself, but without a male like Jim Dandy nearby, female plants stay bare. A Minnesota native and tough as they come. Whether you're setting up a berry display in Maple Grove, anchoring a rain garden in Woodbury, or pollinating a mass planting in Eden Prairie — Jim Dandy is the partner that makes the show happen in zone 4b–5a yards.
Jim Dandy Winterberry Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Ilex verticillata 'Jim Dandy' |
| Common Names | Winterberry, Winterberry Holly, Michigan Holly |
| Plant Role | Male pollinator — produces no berries; required to fruit early-blooming female winterberries |
| Mature Height | 3–5 feet (slow-growing; occasionally to 6) |
| Mature Width | 3–5 feet |
| Growth Rate | Slow — a compact, rounded shrub |
| Sun | Full sun to part shade. Best pollen production in full sun. |
| Water | Moderate to high. Loves consistent moisture and tolerates wet soil — excellent for rain gardens and low spots. |
| USDA Zones | 3–9 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) |
| Soil | Prefers moist, acidic soil. Tolerates Minnesota clay-loam and seasonally wet ground; avoid dry, alkaline sites. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — dark green leaves drop in fall; no berries on this male plant. |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -40°F. Fully hardy across Minnesota. |
| Deer Resistance | Moderately deer-resistant; may be browsed in hard winters. |
| Native Status | Minnesota native — supports native pollinators and the Lawns to Legumes program. |
| Pollinates | Early-blooming females: Afterglow, Red Sprite, Berry Heavy Gold (one male covers up to ~9 females within 50 feet). |
Jim Dandy Winterberry Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Pollinator for a berry display
This is the reason to plant Jim Dandy. Tuck one within about 50 feet of your early-blooming female winterberries and it will pollinate up to 9 of them — turning a row of green shrubs into a fall-and-winter wall of red berries. Pair it with Afterglow or Red Sprite from Three Timbers.
Rain gardens and wet spots
As a native of Minnesota wetlands, winterberry thrives where most shrubs drown. Use Jim Dandy in a rain garden, a downspout basin, or a low, soggy corner in Burnsville or Lakeville that stays wet in spring.
Native and naturalistic plantings
Its native status makes it a natural anchor for a pollinator or restoration-style planting. The early flowers feed native bees even though this plant won't set fruit itself.
Best Time to Plant Jim Dandy Winterberry in Minnesota
Fall (late August–early October) is the ideal planting window. Soil is still warm for root development, cool air reduces transplant stress, and the plant gets 6–8 weeks to establish roots before ground freeze (typically mid-November in the Twin Cities).
Spring (late April–May, after the ground thaws) is the second-best window, giving the shrub a full season to establish before its first winter.
Avoid summer planting (June–August) when possible. Never plant after mid-October or before late April — frozen ground or frost-heaving kills new roots.
How to Plant Jim Dandy Winterberry
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3× the root ball width, same depth as the container. Heavy clay benefits from even wider digging.
- Site it near its females. Plant within ~50 feet of your early-blooming female winterberries so wind and bees can carry the pollen.
- Backfill with native soil mixed with 20–30% compost; acidic, organic-rich soil is ideal. Skip lime.
- It tolerates wet feet, so a low or rain-garden spot is fine — just avoid bone-dry, alkaline sites.
- Build a 3–4 inch water basin to direct water to the roots; flatten it before winter to avoid ice damage.
- Mulch 2–3 inches with shredded bark or wood chips, kept 2 inches off the stems. Do not use gravel mulch in Minnesota.
Watering Jim Dandy Winterberry 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; this moisture-lover would rather be too wet than too dry
- Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in the Twin Cities metro).
After Year One
Established winterberry still appreciates steady moisture — water deeply during any dry spell, especially in summer heat. In a rain garden or naturally moist spot, it often needs no supplemental water at all. Let it stay on the damp side.
Drip Irrigation in Minnesota
If used, place emitters 12–18 inches from the trunk and run them long enough to keep the root zone consistently moist. Always winterize the system — blow out the lines before freeze and shut timers off by early October.
Will Jim Dandy produce berries?
No — Jim Dandy is a male plant and never sets fruit. Its job is to pollinate nearby female winterberries so they produce the bright berries. Think of it as the essential partner, not the showpiece.
How many female winterberries can one Jim Dandy pollinate?
Roughly 9 females, as long as they're early-blooming cultivars (Afterglow, Red Sprite, Berry Heavy Gold) planted within about 50 feet so wind and bees can move the pollen.
Will Jim Dandy survive a Minnesota winter?
Easily — winterberry is a Minnesota native hardy to zone 3, well below Twin Cities lows. No winter protection needed once established.
Does it need wet soil?
It strongly prefers consistent moisture and is one of the few shrubs that thrives in soggy, rain-garden conditions. It struggles in hot, dry, alkaline sites, so keep it moist and skip the lime.
You May Also Like
- Afterglow Winterberry — the early-blooming female Jim Dandy pollinates, for orange-red fall-and-winter berries
- Shop the full Three Timbers Minnesota catalog — zone 4-hardy plants hand-selected for Twin Cities yards
- Rain Garden & Wet-Soil Plants — natives and tough shrubs for low, moist spots
How Many Jim Dandy Winterberry Do I Need?
Jim Dandy is a pollinator, not a mass-planting shrub — you need far fewer males than females. One Jim Dandy covers up to about 9 early-blooming female winterberries planted within 50 feet.
| Female winterberries in your planting | Jim Dandy needed |
|---|---|
| 1–9 | 1 |
| 10–18 | 2 |
| 19–27 | 3 |
Tuck him at the back or end of the bed — he doesn't need a front-row seat to do his job. If he's part of a mixed mass planting, give him a 4-foot spot like any other winterberry.
Jim Dandy Winterberry Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Small greenish-white flowers open in late spring, timed to the early-blooming females. Native bees work the blooms heavily — this is when the pollination magic happens.
- Summer: A tidy, rounded mound of glossy dark-green leaves that blends quietly into the border while the females set fruit.
- Fall: Foliage turns yellow and drops. No berries on this male plant — the show he made possible is on the females nearby.
- Winter: Bare, fine-twigged structure. Fully hardy to -40°F with no protection needed.
At a Glance
✔ Minnesota Native ✔ Pollinator-Friendly ✔ Rain-Garden / Wet-Soil
Plant It With
- Afterglow Winterberry — the early-blooming female he exists to pollinate; plant within 50 feet for loaded orange-red berries.
- First Editions Fiber Optics Buttonbush — fellow native wet-soil shrub that keeps the pollinator buffet going into midsummer.
- Iroquois Beauty Chokeberry — compact native with white spring bloom and glossy black fall fruit for the same moist bed.
- Isanti Dogwood — native red-twig that brings the winter color Jim Dandy himself doesn't carry.
Is Jim Dandy Winterberry Right for Your Yard?
Plant Jim Dandy if you grow (or plan to grow) early-blooming female winterberries like Afterglow within 50 feet, and you have a moist, acidic spot in full sun to part shade — rain gardens and low corners are ideal. He shrugs off wet feet and Minnesota winters alike. Not a fit if you want berries from this plant itself — he never fruits — or if your only open spot is dry, alkaline soil along a limed foundation.