Sierra Red™ Firecracker Bush

Hamelia patens Sierra Red™

hamelia sierra red oct 2020 SCREC

Close up of Hamelia patens Sierra Red flowers and foliage in October 2020 at South Coast REC. Photo: D Martinez

Summary

South Coast Research & Extension Center (South Coast REC/SCREC) is located in Irvine California, this site has a sandy loam soil and plants are irrigated with reclaimed water. UC Davis is located in Davis, California, this site has a silty clay loam soil and plants are irrigated with potable water. More information about the field sites is located in the Nuts & Bolts section.
 

Sierra Red™ is a cultivar of Hamelia patens, a shrub native to subtropical and tropical parts of Florida, Mexico, Central and South America. Sierra Red has bright, glossy green foliage, with reddish coloration at the growing points and clusters of bright orange tubular flowers borne from summer to fall, occasionally followed by blue-black fruits. In Davis, this plant died to the ground during the winter, had 17% total mortality, and surviving plants only began to emerge in late June making July the first time it was big enough to collect data. While some plants did achieve acceptable size and good overall appearance, with several putting on attractive floral displays in September and October, the late emergence from dormancy really limits its use as a perennial in WUCOLS Region 2.

In Irvine, Sierra Red held much of its foliage as it overwintered from establishment to the treatment year, but almost 38% of plants did not survive the establishment year. Inscrutably this disproportionately affected the replicates in the high treatment, though all treatments received the same amount of irrigation during the establishment year. Flowering was modest from July through October. Plants at this site were bothered by thrips, aphids, and mealybugs which adversely affected both foliage ratings and overall health and appearance. This combined with some plant non-uniformity leading to overall appearance scores never averaging much more than just acceptable appearance in Irvine. In Davis, a statistically significant difference in vigor was observed between the high and low treatments (Table 11a). However, since more of the plants on the high treatment were among the first to break dormancy, this unevenness confounds meaningful analysis. The late emergence in Davis and mortality in Irvine have resulted in a less than ideal dataset. Based on the data collected, researchers recommend Sierra Red be irrigated on medium in WUCOLS region 2 and low in region 3.

 

Hamelia 'Sierra Red' at the end of July 2020 in Davis. Photo: K Reid

 

Hamelia patens Sierra Red at UC Davis on high water in September 2020.

Basic Info

Submitted by:Mountain States Wholesale Nursery
Site(s):UC Davis & SCREC
Trial Exposure:Sun
Year evaluated:2020
Height & Width after 2 years:
1.25' x 1.7' - UC Davis
2.7' x 3.2' - SCREC
Reported Height & Width at maturity:
3' x 3-4'
WUCOLS plant type:P
Water Needs & WUCOLS Region:
L -  Region 2 
M - Region 3
Mean Overall  Appearance rating:
(1-5 Scale, 5 is highest)
3.8 - UC Davis 
3.1 - SCREC
Flowering Months:
Sept.-Oct. - UC Davis
July-Oct. - SCREC

Growth and Quality Data

Click Here for Complete Data Set

hamelia sierra red 50 oct 2020 SCREC
Hamelia patens Sierra Red at South Coast REC in October 2020. Photo: D Martinez