Home > Catalogue > Spiraea japonica 'DART'S RED'
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Illustrative photo.
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Spiraea japonica 'DART'S RED' Bumalda spiraea, Japanese spiraea

size/type
medium-sized shrub
usual height
0,6-0,8m
usual width
1-1,5m
leaves
deciduous broadleaf
colour of leaves
green
flowers
showy
colour of flowers
fuchsia
blooming time
June-August
location
full to partial sun
USDA zone (lowest)
3   (down to -40°C)
winter protection
 
for zone 5+6
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 5+6
for zone 7
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 7
mycorrhizal product
categorized

Spiraea

Genus Spiraea was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 in his Species Plantarum. The name derives from the Greek word speira – “wreath” – referring to the delicate arrangement of flowers into wreath‑like corymbs. Spiraeas comprise around seventy species of deciduous shrubs distributed across the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. Botanists traditionally divide them into three groups based on inflorescence type: the salicifolia group with terminal panicles, the japonica group with flat corymbs, and the canescens group with simpler corymbs on short lateral shoots. The advantage of this classification is clarity – gardeners can easily infer flowering time and pruning method. Its drawback is artificiality: boundaries are not always clear and hybrids between groups complicate taxonomy. Nevertheless, the system helps navigate the rich assortment and simplifies practical decisions. 

Spireas became renowned not only for their beauty but also for chemical compounds isolated from them – salicylates, which formed the basis of aspirin, one of the most famous drugs in modern history. Its effects against pain, fever, and inflammation profoundly shaped twentieth‑century medicine. The first introductions of spiraeas into European gardens occurred in 18th and 19th centuries, when new species were imported from China and Japan. In England and France, they quickly became fashionable shrubs, offering abundant flowering and ease of cultivation. Modern research further shows that the Spiraea japonica complex is key to understanding the evolution of East Asian flora: genetic studies reveal differentiation beginning in the early Miocene more than 20 million years ago. Three evolutionary lineages emerged, each with unique diterpenoid alkaloids tied to specific regions – the Hengduan Mountains, central China, and eastern China. Japanese populations formed via a continental land bridge about 6.7 million years ago and have maintained stable demographics ever since. This history illustrates how spiraeas became part of the broader geological and botanical story of East Asia.

Description of the plant

Dart’s Red is an eye-catching Bumalda spiraea with deep pink flowers. They are formed in terminal corymbs from June until late summer if deadheaded continuously. Leaves are narrowly elliptic, coppery red when they emerge, turning dark green in summer, shallowly serrated at margins. When in full bloom the inflorescences are held just above foliage making a stunning display of pink flowers. A sport of Anthony Waterer spiraea.

Last update 04-02-2014

Growing conditions and care

Japanese spiraea ranks among the most reliable and least demanding ornamental shrubs – we call it simply “foolproof.” It thrives in full sun or partial shade, though the richest flowering and foliage colours occur in sunny sites. It can taky virtually any soil type from ordinary garden soil to much poorer mixtures combining construction leftovers and imported dirt. It tolerates drought as well as short‑term waterlogging, and it will even grow in medium‑heavy clay; high fertility or special preparation is not required. Yet in good soil and with regular watering it will look its best and flower longer and repeatedly. Its root system is compact, making it suitable for container culture. Pruning is best done in spring, since it flowers on new wood; shortening shoots promotes density and abundant bloom, and removing spent corymbs can trigger a second flush in late summer. Feeding is not necessary, though a light spring feed after leaf emergence is possible. The species is resistant to browsing by deer, non‑toxic to domestic and farm animals, and very cold‑hardy, tolerating temperatures down to –34 °C requiring no winter protection (USDA zone 4).

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