River Birch (Betula nigra) — Maplewood, MN

River Birch

2"BB
$370.99
Sale price  $370.99 Regular price  $449.99
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River Birch (Betula nigra) — Maplewood, MN

River Birch

$370.99
Sale price  $370.99 Regular price  $449.99
Size
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🌲Grown in Minnesota
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📞Questions? Text 612-214-1955
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Twin Cities, MN
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100% MN-Hardy
Every plant proven in zone 4

A Borer-Proof Native Birch with Showy Cinnamon Bark

The River Birch (Betula nigra) is a native birch celebrated for its outstanding peeling salmon-pink and cinnamon bark, naturally graceful arching form, and exceptional tolerance for wet soils. Best of all, it's resistant to the bronze birch borer that decimates other birches — making it the most trouble-free birch you can plant. Fast-growing and available as a dramatic multi-stem clump or a single trunk, River Birch shines in the damp, low spots where other trees struggle, anchoring a rain garden in Edina, a wet backyard in Plymouth, or a spacious Woodbury lawn.

River Birch Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Betula nigra
Common Names River Birch, Black Birch, Water Birch
Mature Height 40-70 feet
Mature Width 40-60 feet
Growth Rate Fast
Sun Full sun to part shade (4+ hours)
Water Moderate to high; loves moisture and tolerates wet soil
USDA Zones 4-9 (Twin Cities is zone 4b-5a)
Soil Tolerates wet soils — ideal for rain gardens and low spots; also adapts to average loam
Foliage Deciduous; glossy green turning clear yellow in fall
Bark Showy peeling salmon-pink to cinnamon exfoliating bark
Form Graceful, arching; available as multi-stem clump or single trunk
Winter Hardiness Reliable through zone 4
Deer Resistance Moderate
Native Status North American native; excellent borer resistance

River Birch Uses in Minnesota Landscapes

Rain Gardens and Wet Sites for Larger Properties

River Birch thrives in the damp, poorly drained ground where most trees rot. Its size makes it ideal for larger properties — anchor a big rain garden, plant a wet drainage swale, edge a pond, or green up a chronically soggy backyard in Plymouth, Woodbury, or Maple Grove. With many Twin Cities cities offering rain-garden rebates, it's a beautiful, functional choice.

Warm-Toned Exfoliating-Bark Specimen

The bark is the showstopper — salmon-pink and cinnamon, peeling and curling for year-round interest in warmer tones than a white birch. Grown as a multi-stem clump it's a dramatic specimen with several trunks of beautiful bark; as a single trunk it's a graceful shade tree. Either makes a focal point in an Edina or Wayzata landscape.

Borer-Proof Native Shade Tree

River Birch is essentially immune to bronze birch borer, the pest that kills so many paper and European white birches in Minnesota. Fast-growing, heat-tolerant, and happy in full sun or part shade, it's the most dependable birch for a large or low site, casting cool, graceful shade in Minneapolis and Eden Prairie yards.

Best Time to Plant River Birch in Minnesota

As a deciduous tree, River Birch can be planted in spring (late April through May, once the ground has thawed) or early fall (September through mid-October). Spring planting is ideal for birches, giving the roots a full cool, moist season to establish. If you plant in fall, do it early enough for roots to settle before freeze. Avoid the heat of midsummer when possible, and don't plant after mid-October, when frozen ground can heave new roots.

How to Plant River Birch

  1. Dig wide, not deep. Make the hole 2 to 3 times the width of the root ball but no deeper — the root flare should sit slightly above grade. In heavy clay, go even wider.
  2. Embrace the moisture. Unlike most trees, River Birch welcomes a damp or low site — you don't need perfect drainage. It also adapts to average soil, so it's flexible either way.
  3. Backfill with amended soil. Mix native soil with 20 to 30 percent compost to hold moisture and loosen heavy clay.
  4. Set it at the right depth. Plant so the root flare is visible at the surface — never bury the trunk. Remove twine and fold back burlap on B&B stock; with multi-stem clumps, keep the whole base at grade.
  5. Build a water basin. Form a 3 to 4 inch soil ring around the base to direct water to the roots. Flatten it before winter so ice doesn't collect against the trunks.
  6. Mulch generously. Spread 3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips in a wide ring (kept 2 inches off the trunks) to hold moisture and keep roots cool. Skip gravel mulch — it heats the soil, the opposite of what a birch wants.

Watering River Birch in Minnesota

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Deep soak every 1 to 2 days (15–25 minutes at a slow trickle).
  • Month 1–2: Every 2 to 3 days — keep the root zone consistently moist.
  • Month 3–6: Every 4 to 6 days during active growth; in a naturally damp site, let the soil moisture do more of the work.
  • Stop supplemental watering 2 to 3 weeks before the ground freezes (late October in the metro) so the tree can harden off for winter.

After Year One

River Birch loves moisture and never becomes drought-tolerant the way a coffeetree does, so keep it watered during dry spells — a deep soak every 7 to 10 days when there's been a week or more without rain. In a wet or low spot, it largely takes care of itself. A thick mulch ring keeps roots cool and reduces stress.

Will River Birch survive a Minnesota winter?

Yes — it's hardy through USDA zone 4, which covers the Twin Cities' zone 4b–5a, so it's reliable across the metro. In the very coldest, most exposed exurban sites a zone-3 white birch like Prairie Dream or Dakota Pinnacle is the safer bet, but throughout the metro River Birch performs beautifully with no special winter protection once established.

Is it deer-resistant?

Moderately. Deer don't strongly favor birch, but they may browse young growth or rub the trunks, especially in high-pressure western suburbs like Minnetonka and Wayzata. A trunk guard the first couple of winters protects the showy bark.

Is it really resistant to birch borer?

Yes — River Birch is essentially immune to bronze birch borer, the pest that kills so many paper and European white birches here. That resistance, plus its tolerance for heat and wet soil, makes it the most dependable birch for tough or low sites in Minnesota.

How is it different from Heritage River Birch?

Both are river birches with the same toughness and borer resistance. The straight species shows warmer salmon-pink-to-cinnamon bark and can grow quite large, while the 'Heritage' cultivar was selected for lighter, creamier-white bark. Choose the species for that classic warm-toned look, Heritage for a brighter, paler trunk.

You May Also Like

  • Heritage River Birch — a selected river birch with showy creamy-white exfoliating bark.
  • Prairie Dream Birch — a native paper birch selection with bright white bark and zone-2 hardiness for drier, colder sites.
  • Whitespire Birch — a borer-resistant chalk-white birch for average yards.
  • Dakota Pinnacle Birch — a narrow pyramidal white-bark birch for tighter, drier spots.

How Many River Birches Do I Need?

One multi-stem clump reads as a full grove and anchors a rain garden or low spot on its own — give it 40–50 feet of eventual width. For an instant-grove effect with single-trunk trees, plant a triangle of 3 spaced 12–15 feet apart; the crowns will knit into one graceful canopy. Along a pond edge or drainage swale, space clumps 25–30 feet on center. This is a big tree at maturity — keep it 20+ feet from foundations and septic lines.

River Birch Season-by-Season in Minnesota

  • Spring: Dangling catkins appear before the glossy green leaves unfurl; fast new growth begins early in the cool, moist season birches love.
  • Summer: A full, arching canopy casts cool dappled shade while the peeling salmon-and-cinnamon bark curls on the trunks beneath.
  • Fall: Foliage turns a clear butter-yellow that glows against the dark exfoliating bark.
  • Winter: The signature season for bark — layers of peeling cinnamon, salmon, and cream catch low winter light and snow, especially dramatic on multi-stem clumps.

At a Glance

✔ Minnesota Native   ✔ Rain-Garden / Wet-Soil   ✔ Shade-Tolerant   ✔ Four-Season Interest

Plant It With

  • Heritage River Birch — the creamy-white-barked cultivar; mix the two for a warm-and-pale bark contrast in a large planting.
  • Prairie Dream Birch — bright white native paper birch for the drier, colder corners of the same property.
  • Whitespire Birch — chalk-white, borer-resistant trunks that pair handsomely with River Birch's cinnamon tones.
  • Dakota Pinnacle Birch — a narrow vertical birch accent where the yard tightens up.

Is River Birch Right for Your Yard?

River Birch thrives in full sun to part shade in moist, even soggy ground — it's the answer for the low, wet corner where everything else fails, and the borer immunity makes it the lowest-risk birch in Minnesota. Plan for real size: 40–70 feet tall and nearly as wide. It's not a fit for small lots, dry sandy yards, or anywhere you can't water during droughts — a stressed, thirsty river birch drops yellow leaves in mid-summer and never looks its best on dry sites.

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