Shrub

Firebush

Hamelia patens · Rubiaceae

Also called: Scarlet bush, Hummingbird bush, Mexican firebush

Firebush (Hamelia patens) is a moderate-water shrub well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a fast-growing shrub.

Firebush (Hamelia patens) growing in Tucson
Photo: Alejandro Bayer Tamayo from Armenia, Colombia (CC BY-SA 2.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Firebush at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun for best flower and foliage color; tolerates light afternoon shade in Tucson's intense heat.
Mature size
3-6 ft tall and wide in Tucson as a die-back perennial shrub (taller, to 8-10 ft, in frost-free climates)
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Orange-red to scarlet tubular flowers, followed by black berries, Late spring through fall (essentially until frost)
Cold hardiness
Frost-sensitive; foliage damaged below ~32 F and it typically dies to the ground in a hard freeze, recovering from the roots in spring. Best as a warm-season/die-back perennial in USDA 9a-9b.
Soil
Adaptable; prefers well-draining soil with some organic matter. Tolerates Tucson's alkaline soils reasonably but can show mild chlorosis in very poor caliche.
Native range
Florida, Mexico, Caribbean, Central and South America (NOT native to the Sonoran Desert)
Best used as
Hummingbird and butterfly habitat, Summer color shrub, Pollinator garden, Informal screen or accent
Wildlife
Excellent hummingbird, butterfly (including swallowtails), and bee plant; berries eaten by birds.
Toxicity
Considered non-toxic to people and pets; berries are eaten in some cultures and used medicinally, but not recommended for casual consumption.

How to grow Firebush in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water deeply 1-2 times per week in summer once established; reduce to every 10-14 days in cooler months and minimally in winter. Appreciates more water than true desert plants but needs good drainage.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder. Apply a balanced slow-release fertilizer in spring as growth resumes; a second light feeding in early summer supports the long bloom. Avoid heavy nitrogen, which favors leaves over flowers.

Pruning & care

In Tucson it usually freezes back in winter; cut frost-damaged stems to the ground in late winter (Feb) and it regrows vigorously from the base. Light tip-pruning through the season keeps it compact.

Notes

One of the best heat-loving pollinator shrubs for the low desert. Treat it as a heat-season performer that may freeze back each winter in Tucson; site it in a warm, protected microclimate to reduce die-back. Hamelia patens var. glabra ('African' firebush) is more compact and somewhat hardier.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum plant references; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert

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