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   Simcoe County Master Gardeners  

PLANT PROFILE

COMMON NAME: Boreal Yarrow *

BINOMIAL: Achillea borealis

FamilyAsteracae
Cdn Native RangeAlaska, Canada, NE of USA
Natural habitatprairies, open forests, disturbed areas
Typeherbaceous perennial
Featuresfern-like leaves, small white flowers, aromatic ferny gray-green leaves
Growth habitspreading
Mature height 30–60 cm (12–24”)
Mature spreadspreads rapidly by rhizomes, forms dense mats
Life spanperennial
Cdn Hardiness Zone3–7
Growing conditionsfull sun
Soil conditionswell-drained, sandy loams or poor soil
Watering needsdrought tolerant
Fertilizer needsnone
Tolerancedrought, extreme cold, deer tolerant
Maintenance ranklow; deadhead spent flowers to lateral buds for more blooms
Maintenance needsdivide every 3–4 years. 
BloomJune – September- clusters of white flowers, corymbs 2” diameter
Fruitseed
Pollinator supportfood source for pollinators; larval host for painted lady butterfly; larval host for wavy-lined emerald, yellow plume, and several other moths
Environmental supportpollen attracts beneficial insects; foliage is used by several cavity-nesting birds to line their nests
Garden Usenaturalized areas; used to stabilize soil, ornamental
Risks & Cautionsmay promote an allergic reaction; intolerant of hot humid summers; prone to stem rot, powdery mildew, rust.

References: Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder, www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx; Wild About Flowers,https://wildaboutflowers.ca/products/yarrow

*Note: This plant is listed in various sources both as a native and of Eurasian origin possibly having hybridized and naturalized with common yarrow (Achillea millefolium).

Photo Credits:

Common Yarrow – bloom (credit: Allen Browne, CC BY 4.0)

Common Yarrow–clump (credit: sonnia hill, CC BY 2.0)