Northern Bayberry
Myrica pensylvanica
Planting & Care
Planting & Care
Delivery and Shipping
Delivery and Shipping
Preorder Shipping Schedule
We ship your plants when it's safe to transport them to your zone. Dates are estimated and subject to weather delays.
| Zone 3-4 | Week of March 30th |
| Zone 5 | Week of March 16th |
| Zone 6-12 | Week of March 2nd |
Shipping Rates
Ships in 7-10 business days • Tracking provided • Weather protected
| Under $50 | $9.99 |
| $50 - $99.99 | $14.99 |
| $100 - $149.99 | $16.99 |
| $150 - $198.99 | $24.99 |
| $199+ | FREE |
✓ Zone-specific timing • ✓ Professional packaging • ✓ Health guarantee
Understanding Our Container Sizes
At Nature Hills, our plants are sold in industry-standard nursery containers. You will notice we use the word "container" rather than "gallon." Container numbers follow a nursery trade size standard, not liquid volume. The number tells you the plant's size category and general maturity level. A larger container means a more established plant with a stronger root system.

Container Sizes
Quart
Plant age: 6 months to 1 year
Best for: Ground covers, perennials, ornamental grasses
What to expect: Our smallest and most affordable size. Well-suited for planting in multiples across a large area. Allow 1 to 2 seasons for full establishment.
#1 Container
Plant age: 1 to 2 years
Best for: Shrubs, perennials, smaller trees
What to expect: About the size of a large coffee can. A well-developed root system in a manageable size. Good value choice when you have time to let the plant grow into the space over a season or two.
#2 Container
Plant age: 2 to 3 years
Best for: Shrubs and trees where you want faster establishment
What to expect: A noticeable step up from a #1 in both plant size and root development. Good choice when you want visible presence without going to a larger size.
#3 Container
Plant age: 3 to 4 years
Best for: Most plants, most situations — flowering trees, shade trees, evergreen shrubs
What to expect: Our most popular size. Strong, developed root system. Plants in a #3 container make an immediate visual impact from day one. If you want a head start rather than waiting seasons for a plant to fill in, this is typically the right choice.
#5 Container and Larger
Plant age: 4 to 5+ years
Best for: Specimen plants, privacy screens, maximum instant impact
What to expect: Large, mature plants ready to make an immediate statement in your landscape. We also carry #7 and larger sizes for select varieties.
Why "Container" and Not "Gallon"?
Nursery container sizes follow an industry trade standard established for the nursery and horticulture industry. The number is a size designation, not a measurement of liquid volume. Actual soil volume varies by plant type, root mass, and growing medium. Using "container" is the accurate industry term. When you see #1, #2, or #3, think of it as the plant's size tier, not a gallon measurement.
Root Pouch Containers
Some Nature Hills plants arrive in a Root Pouch, a breathable fabric container made from 100% recycled materials. Root Pouches encourage denser root development through air pruning, which discourages root circling and promotes a stronger, more fibrous root ball at the time of planting.

There are two types. Knowing which one you have changes how you plant:
- Degradable (brown or tan fabric): Plant the entire pouch directly in the ground. The fabric breaks down naturally in the soil over time.
- Non-degradable (black or gray fabric): Remove the pouch before planting. Cut the bottom open with scissors, then peel the sides away. The fibrous root ball will hold its shape.
Not sure which type you have? Check the tag on your plant or contact us and we will confirm.
Full Root Pouch planting guide
Choosing the Right Size
| Size | Plant Age | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Quart | 6 mo to 1 yr | Ground covers, perennials, grasses. Budget-friendly for mass plantings. |
| #1 Container | 1 to 2 yrs | Shrubs, perennials, small trees. Value choice for patient gardeners. |
| #2 Container | 2 to 3 yrs | Shrubs and trees where you want faster establishment. |
| #3 Container | 3 to 4 yrs | Most plants. Immediate visual impact. Our most popular size. |
| #5 and larger | 4+ yrs | Specimen plants, privacy screens, maximum instant impact. |
Still not sure which size is right for your project? Our plant specialists are happy to help. Contact us and we will point you in the right direction.
Plant Sentry™ Protected
Your order is protected by our compliance system that:
- Prevents restricted plants from shipping to your state
- Ensures plants meet your state's agricultural requirements
- Protects gardens from invasive pests and diseases
Description
Bird-Friendly Fragrant Native Shrub Northern Bayberry
- Dark Green, Aromatic Foliage is Densely Held
- Showy Clusters of White Berries Have Waxy Coating
- Traditionally Used in Bayberry Candles
- Attracts Butterflies and Birds, but Not Deer
- Native to North America
- Versatile
- Semi-Evergreen in Warmer Zones
- Tolerates Coastal and Road Salt
- Tolerates Urban Pollution
- Related to Southern Wax Myrtle
One of our most valuable native shrubs, Northern Bayberry (Myrica pensylvanica) should be considered for ornamental landscape use across a variety of growing zones and growing conditions. Songbirds, game birds, butterflies, and moths will appreciate your thoughtful choice.
Bayberries are hard-working, aromatic shrubs that deliver a lot of benefits for wildlife. With dense branching and a rounded upright growth habit, this is a fine choice for naturalizing. You'll appreciate the fragrance and the privacy screen!
This plant remains semi-evergreen in warmer climates, but becomes deciduous the further north you go. It is a rugged selection that fixes nitrogen in the soil to improve the fertility of your land over time.
Leathery leaves are broad and lance-shaped and emit resin from pores on the underneath side. Deer don't prefer the taste, but you'll love the clean, natural scent of the aromatic foliage.
Bayberry leaves emit a classic fragrance throughout the spring and summer. Try them as a natural insect repellent.
Crush them between your fingers and apply the resin to your ankles, wrists, and neck. You may still get a few bites, but boy, you'll smell terrific!
Bayberry plants are dioecious, with separate male and female plants. Tiny inconspicuous yellow-green flowers on the male plants provide nectar for moths and butterflies in spring. Pollinated female plants produce berries (actually drupes) that provide so much winter interest.
If you want to grow the desirable, fragrant, waxy-coated pale berries, plant in groups so the males can pollinate the female plants that will produce fruit. After all, Bayberry is a dioecious shrub, similar to Holly that has both male and female plants.
The Northern Bayberry berries have long been used as a candle-making ingredient. In fact, you might hear this native called by several nicknames, including Candleberry and Swamp Candleberry.
Colonialists boiled the berries to extract the waxy coating. It takes roughly 4 pounds of berries to produce a single candle the old-fashioned way.
These days, you can simply use large handfuls to add a tremendous natural fragrance to more modern handmade candles, soaps, and in dried potpourri mixes. We are so lucky, aren't we?
Great even for beginning gardeners, this historically important native shrub is extremely tolerant of sandy soil and even high salt content. Try it as a street planting without fear of damage from road salt.
Including Bayberry in your garden scheme ensures a safe harbor for a variety of desirable creatures from birds to butterflies. Order yours today to create attractive wildlife habitats and add fragrance to your landscape.
The expert growers at Nature Hills love these special shrubs. Order your Northern Bayberry today and start your own love affair with them.
How to Use Northern Bayberry in the Landscape
Bayberry creates attractive hedges, mass plantings, and privacy borders, but it may also be successfully integrated as a focal point planting.
Create a Fragrance Garden with Bayberry, Lavender, Lilacs, Fragrant Sumac, fragrant Roses, Fragrant Sweet Box, Mock Orange, and indoor/outdoor Citrus trees in large containers. Add a hammock chair and you'll never forget the sensory experience.
Add a hedge of Bayberry to create "Living Walls" all around a special Meditation Garden or outdoor Yoga Studio. Be invigorated and recharged in your space.
Bird lovers should take a close look at this selection. Migrating birds and gamebirds eat the energy-rich berries over hard winters
Northern Bayberry shrubs also give songbirds and game birds plenty of shelter over the winter. Include several of these low-maintenance shrubs near your bird feeders to provide cover.
Plant responsible landscapes that take advantage of our wonderful native plants. Pair these with native Itea, such as Little Henry Sweetspire, for easy-care landscape hedges. You can also use them on embankments to control soil erosion.
#ProPlantTips for Care
These rugged plants are widely adaptable. They grow in chalky, clay, loamy, sandy, alkaline or acidic soils and even poor soils. They tolerate periodic flooding but are drought-tolerant once they are established.
Bet you are starting to see how durable these shrubs are, aren't you?
Northern Bayberry grows in full sun to partial shade. For best performance, give them at least 4 hours of direct sunlight a day.
For the best silvery berry production, use multiple plants. Plant four feet apart to create a solid screen, or use a double, staggered row and a zigzagging planting pattern.
Enjoy the ornamental features of our native Northern Bayberry plants. Order today!
Specifications
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Botanical Name
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Class
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Species
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Growing Zones
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Height
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Width
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Sunlight
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Growth RateModerate
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Flower Color
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Leaf Color
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NativeYes
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FragrantYes
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Bloom PeriodEarly Spring, Late Spring
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Does Not Ship ToAK, HI, ID, MT, PR
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