Scotch Pine
A Rugged, Fast Pine for Windbreaks and Character
Scotch Pine (Pinus sylvestris) is a tough, fast-growing pine long planted across the Midwest for windbreaks and shelterbelts. Young trees are conical and dense; with age they develop an irregular, picturesque crown and striking flaky orange-brown bark. Blue-green needles, drought tolerance, and cold hardiness make it a low-maintenance workhorse.
Scotch Pine Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Pinus sylvestris |
| Common Names | Scotch Pine, Scots Pine |
| Mature Height | 30-60 feet |
| Mature Width | 20-35 feet |
| Growth Rate | Fast - 1-2 feet per year when young |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) |
| Water | Low once established; drought-tolerant. |
| USDA Zones | 3-7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b-5a) |
| Soil | Adaptable; tolerates Minnesota clay-loam. |
| Foliage | Evergreen - twisted blue-green needles in pairs; orange-brown bark on mature trunks |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -40F. |
| Deer Resistance | Moderate to good - deer largely avoid mature pines, though tender new growth may be nibbled. |
| Native Status | Not native; a European species long grown across the Midwest |
Scotch Pine Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Windbreaks and Shelterbelts
Scotch Pine is a classic Upper Midwest shelterbelt tree - fast-growing and dense when young, it quickly forms a wall of green to block wind and add privacy. Space the trees 12-15 feet apart in a row on a rural-edge or outer-ring metro property for a windbreak that establishes faster than most conifers.
Character Specimen with Ornamental Bark
With age, Scotch Pine develops an irregular, picturesque crown and beautiful flaky orange-brown bark that glows in winter light. Planted as a single specimen in a Minneapolis or St. Paul yard, that bark and character make it a true four-season feature rather than just another green pyramid.
Drought-Tough, Adaptable Evergreen
It asks for very little - tolerating poor and clay soils, heat, and drought once established. That toughness makes it a dependable choice for a hard spot in Plymouth or Maple Grove where you want fast, low-maintenance evergreen height.
Best Time to Plant Scotch Pine in Minnesota
As an evergreen, Scotch 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 Scotch Pine
- Dig the hole two to three times as wide as the root ball but no deeper - in heavy clay, go wider still and set the top of the root ball slightly above grade.
- Check for clay hardpan: if water pools in the bottom of the hole, break through the compacted layer or mound-plant. Scotch Pine prefers good drainage and dislikes wet feet.
- Backfill with the native soil; in heavy clay, mix in 20-30% compost. It does not need rich soil.
- Give a specimen room - 15-20 feet - or space windbreak trees 12-15 feet apart in a row.
- Build a 3-4 inch watering basin around the root zone for the first season, then flatten it before winter to prevent ice damage.
- 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 Scotch 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 - 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 drought-tolerant and need supplemental water only during extended dry spells.
- Water deeply and infrequently, and let natural rainfall do most of the work.
Will Scotch Pine survive a Minnesota winter?
Easily. It is hardy to roughly -40F (USDA zone 3), well beyond the Twin Cities metro range of zone 4b-5a, and Scotch Pine has been grown across the Upper Midwest for generations.
How fast does it grow?
Fast - often 1-2 feet per year when young, which is why it is such a popular shelterbelt and quick-screen tree. Growth slows as it matures into its picturesque form.
What makes the bark special?
As Scotch Pine ages, its upper trunk and branches develop flaky, warm orange-brown bark. Against snow and low winter sun, that bark is one of the tree's most striking features.
Is Scotch Pine deer-resistant?
Moderately. Deer largely leave mature pines alone but may nibble tender new growth on young trees. In high-pressure suburbs like Minnetonka and Wayzata, protect young trees for the first couple of winters.
You May Also Like
- French Blue Scotch Pine - a silver-blue selection of this same pine with standout color.
- Jack Pine - a tough native pine for the sandiest, driest sites.
- Norway Spruce - a fast, large spruce for a denser windbreak or specimen.
- White Spruce - a hardy native spruce for windbreaks and screens.
How Many Scotch Pines Do I Need?
For a windbreak or shelterbelt row, space Scotch Pine 13 feet apart (center to center):
| Run Length | Trees Needed |
| 26 feet | 3 |
| 52 feet | 5 |
| 78 feet | 7 |
| 104 feet | 9 |
| 130 feet | 11 |
For serious wind protection on open ground, plant a double staggered row with 16 feet between rows. As a character specimen, give a single tree 20–35 feet of clear width to develop its picturesque crown.
Scotch Pine Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Upright candles of new growth extend 1–2 feet, keeping young trees dense and conical.
- Summer: Twisted blue-green needle pairs hold cool color through heat and drought with no supplemental care.
- Fall: The evergreen canopy becomes the backbone of the yard as deciduous trees drop, and the windbreak starts working hardest.
- Winter: Flaky orange-brown bark glows in low winter sun against the snow — the tree's signature feature — while dense boughs shelter overwintering birds.
At a Glance
✔ Deer-Resistant ✔ Drought-Tolerant ✔ Evergreen ✔ Four-Season Interest
Plant It With
- French Blue Scotch Pine — the steel-blue selection; mix a few into a green Scotch row for color variation.
- Jack Pine — the native counterpart for the sandiest, driest stretch of the same shelterbelt.
- Norway Spruce — denser, darker green to layer behind Scotch Pine for a two-row windbreak.
- White Spruce — a hardy native spruce that fills the lower gaps as Scotch Pines lose their skirts with age.
Is Scotch Pine Right for Your Yard?
Scotch Pine thrives in full sun on well-drained ground — sandy, poor, or clay soil is fine — and once established it shrugs off drought and -40°F winters with almost no care. Give it room: 15–20 feet for a specimen, more for the mature spread. It's not a fit for soggy low spots (it hates wet feet), small formal yards — the crown gets charmingly irregular with age, not tidy — or strict native-only landscapes, where Jack Pine is the better pick.