Amelanchier alnifolia ‘Northline’
Amelanchier alnifolia 'Northline' produces large, late-ripening Saskatoon berries that all ripen at the same time.

Amelanchier alnifolia is best-known as the Saskatoon berry but is also called the western or alder leaved serviceberry. It is a super hardy medium sized to large deciduous shrub that produces lovely white flowers in spring followed by tasty blue to purple-black fruit in summer that can be used in jams, jellies, pies, and herbal teas. The fruit has a similar nutrient profile to blueberries and was an important food for First Nations peoples who added the berries to dried meat to make pemmican. It is also an important larval host to the caterpillars of various swallowtail butterfly species. The fruit is eaten by birds, squirrels, and other wildlife. ‘Northline’ produces large, late-ripening fruit that all ripen at the same time, a valuable trait for harvesting making this cultivar the most common commercial variety. Plants sucker freely.
Common Name: Saskatoon Berry - [Citrus Pre-Order]
Family: Rosaceae (The Rose Family)
Zone Hardiness: 2-9
Light: Full Sun, Part Sun
Height: 6-10'
Width: 3-5'
Primary Bloom Colour: White/Cream
Secondary Bloom Colour: Green
Bloom Time: Spring
Foliage Colour: Green, Bluish, Good Fall Colour
Class: Deciduous
Type: Shrub
Soil Moisture: Average, Moist, Wet , Dry
Stem Colour:
Fragrance: Yes
Berries: Purple
Benefits: Bees, Butterflies
Deer Resistant: No
BC Native: Yes
Native Habitat: Dry to mesic and sometimes moist sites on open rocky slopes and bluffs and in gullies, thickets, open forests and at forest margins from sea level to the subalpine across much of western North America.
Award:
Geographical Origin: North America