Prairie Sentinel Hackberry
A Bombproof Native Shade Tree in a Narrow Column
Prairie Sentinel Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis 'JFS-KSU1') takes one of the toughest native trees on the prairie and packs it into the narrowest hackberry form available — a tightly columnar selection just 12 to 15 feet wide at 40 to 45 feet tall. Bred at Kansas State, it pairs the species' legendary durability — it shrugs off drought, wind, road salt, clay, and brutal cold — with a slim, fastigiate habit ideal for boulevards and narrow side yards where a spreading shade tree won't fit. Hardy to zone 3 and essentially indestructible, it's a low-maintenance workhorse. Whether you're lining a boulevard in St. Paul, screening a tight lot in Plymouth, or adding vertical native shade in Woodbury, Prairie Sentinel does the heavy lifting in a small footprint.
Prairie Sentinel Hackberry Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
| Scientific Name | Celtis occidentalis 'JFS-KSU1' (Prairie Sentinel) |
| Common Names | Prairie Sentinel Hackberry, Columnar Hackberry |
| Mature Height | 40–45 feet |
| Mature Width | 12–15 feet — tightly columnar |
| Growth Rate | Moderate |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) for best form |
| Water | Moderate. Highly drought-tolerant once established. |
| USDA Zones | 3–9 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) — extremely hardy across the metro |
| Soil | Exceptionally adaptable. Tolerates clay, sand, drought, wet sites, high pH, and road salt. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — clean green leaves turning yellow in fall |
| Fruit | Small berry-like drupes relished by birds |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -40°F once established |
| Deer Resistance | Good — generally not a preferred browse |
| Native Status | A columnar selection of Celtis occidentalis, a Minnesota native |
Prairie Sentinel Hackberry Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Narrow Boulevards and Street Trees
Hackberry is one of the toughest urban trees there is, and Prairie Sentinel's tight 12–15 foot width makes it ideal for boulevards, parking strips, and street-side spots where a wide canopy would crowd the space. It tolerates the salt, compaction, and reflected heat that kill lesser trees.
Tall Narrow Shade and Screening
At 40–45 feet tall but slim, it provides vertical shade and screening on narrow lots and along property lines in close-set suburbs like Richfield or St. Louis Park. Plant a row for a tall, space-saving living screen.
Tough Native Workhorse
As a selection of our native hackberry, it brings genuine durability and wildlife value — the small fruits feed birds, and the tree withstands drought, wind, wet soil, and bitter cold with ease. It's a plant-it-and-forget-it native for difficult sites.
Best Time to Plant Prairie Sentinel Hackberry in Minnesota
Hackberry is deciduous, so you have two good planting windows in the Twin Cities:
Spring (late April–May), once the ground has thawed, is excellent — the tree gets the full growing season to establish before its first winter.
Fall (September–mid-October) also works well. Plant at least six weeks before the ground freezes so roots can settle in. Avoid mid-summer planting when heat stress is highest, and never plant into frozen ground.
How to Plant Prairie Sentinel Hackberry
- Dig wide, not deep — the hole should be 2–3 times the root ball width but only as deep as the ball itself. In heavy clay, dig even wider.
- Check drainage — hackberry tolerates both wet and dry, but set the crown at grade and avoid standing water at planting.
- Backfill with the native soil mixed with 20–30% compost. Don't create a pure-compost "container" in clay.
- Set the tree so the top of the root ball sits at or just above grade. Space trees 8–12 feet apart for a narrow screen.
- Build a 3–4 inch water basin around the root zone to direct water to the roots; flatten it before winter.
- Mulch with 2–3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips, kept 2 inches from the trunk, and wrap the young trunk the first winter or two.
Watering Prairie Sentinel Hackberry in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
Weeks 1–2: water every 1–2 days, deep and slow. Month 1–2: every 3–4 days. Month 3 through fall: every 5–7 days during active growth, less when rainfall is adequate. Stop watering 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes in late October so the tree can harden off for winter.
After Year One
Established Prairie Sentinel Hackberry is exceptionally drought-tolerant, needing supplemental water only during prolonged dry spells. Water deeply to 6–8 inches every 7–14 days during extended drought, and otherwise let natural rainfall do the work.
Will Prairie Sentinel Hackberry survive a Minnesota winter? Absolutely — it's hardy to about -40°F and is one of the toughest trees you can plant here.
How narrow does it stay? Just 12–15 feet wide at 40–45 feet tall — the narrowest hackberry available, ideal for boulevards and tight spaces.
Why is hackberry so tough? It tolerates drought, wind, road salt, compacted soil, high pH, and both wet and dry sites — a remarkably adaptable native that thrives where many trees fail.
Is it native to Minnesota? Yes — it's a columnar selection of Celtis occidentalis, a native hackberry, so it offers native toughness and bird-friendly fruit.
You May Also Like
- Common Hackberry — the classic broad-crowned native hackberry for tough sites.
- Swedish Columnar Aspen — another narrow columnar tree for fast, slim screening.
- Eye Stopper Cork Tree — a tough, seedless shade tree with striking corky bark.
- Sunburst Honeylocust — a fast, fine-textured shade tree with golden new growth.
How Many Prairie Sentinel Hackberry Do I Need?
For a tall narrow screen or boulevard row, space trees 8–12 feet apart on center; the tight columns close ranks within a few seasons. As a single vertical accent or street tree, give it 12–15 feet of clearance from buildings and wires-free overhead space.
| Row Length | Trees at 10-ft Spacing |
| 30 feet | 4 trees |
| 50 feet | 6 trees |
| 100 feet | 11 trees |
| 150 feet | 16 trees |
Prairie Sentinel Hackberry Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Leafs out reliably with clean green foliage on the tight column; inconspicuous flowers set the stage for fall fruit.
- Summer: A dense pillar of green that shrugs off heat, drought, wind, and boulevard salt residue — no summer babying required.
- Fall: Foliage turns yellow while small berry-like drupes ripen — robins, cedar waxwings, and other songbirds strip them through autumn.
- Winter: The narrow silhouette and developing corky, ridged bark stand up to -40°F, snow load, and salt spray without complaint.
At a Glance
✔ Minnesota Native ✔ Deer-Resistant ✔ Salt-Tolerant ✔ Drought-Tolerant ✔ Rain-Garden / Wet-Soil
Plant It With
- Common Hackberry — the broad-crowned parent species where you have room to spread.
- Swedish Columnar Aspen — a faster columnar partner to mix into a narrow screen.
- Eye Stopper Cork Tree — tough, seedless shade with showy corky bark for the open yard.
- Sunburst Honeylocust — golden fine-textured foliage to contrast the hackberry's dense column.
Is Prairie Sentinel Hackberry Right for Your Yard?
Choose it if you need a no-excuses vertical tree for a brutal spot — boulevard strips, salty street edges, windy exposed lots, heavy clay, or drought-prone sand — and want native wildlife value in a 12–15 foot footprint. It's not a fit if you're after showy flowers or knockout fall color; this tree's beauty is quiet, and its value is in being absolutely dependable.