Orders with subtotals $1,200 and above receive bulk pricing.
Bulk prices will automatically be applied.
If you have placed orders totaling at least $1,200 at Fedco within
the past 12 months, additional orders qualify for bulk pricing.
Scionwood order
deadline:
February 21, 2025
Priority fulfillment
deadline for trees:
March 7, 2025
Final order deadline for trees:
mid-spring, when we run out of stock
Orders placed on or before March 7 will ship around
March 26 through late April, starting with warmer areas and finishing in
colder areas.
Orders placed after March 7 will ship around late
April
through early-to-mid May, in the order in which they were received.
Sorry, we cannot expedite these orders, add to existing orders or
combine orders.NOTE: Scionwood and early rootstock orders ship around March
10.
Amelanchier spp. 4-6' × same. A. a. J. Candrian intro, Faribault, MN, 1997. Also called Juneberry, Parsonberry, Serviceberry, Shadblow, Shadbush and Shad.
Purplish-black sweet berries great for pies, cobblers, jellies, jams, smoothies and cakes. Berries are about the size of a lowbush blueberry, or a bit larger, and seedier. Beautiful fragrant 5-petaled white flowers are early harbingers of spring in Maine. Nice red-orange fall foliage.
An open-pollinated seedling originating near Regent, ND. Compact prolific shrub with sweet purple-magenta berries. Fruit ripens in mid-July in central Maine. Plant in well-drained fertile soil and full sun. Foliage somewhat susceptible to leaf spot or rust but this doesn’t affect fruit. Z2. Maine Grown. (1–3' shrubs)
7423
Regent
** Small & Light shipping
applies if you order only items with stock numbers beginning with
"L".
Click
here for a
complete list of qualifying items.
Additional Information
Saskatoons (Amelanchier spp.)
Considered to be self-fruitful but we recommend planting with other Amelanchiers to ensure pollination.
We’re excited to be expanding our selection of saskatoon cultivars this year. We’ve always admired our native Amelanchiers in the wilds of Maine where they grow along stream edges and rocky slopes. Recently we’re learning more about saskatoons farmed commercially for fruit in Canada, much like how we grow highbush blueberries. In Canada there are saskatoon festivals, and even a baseball team called the Saskatoon Berries! For a taller tree species of Amelanchier, see Allegheny Serviceberry