In the Southern U.S. crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia spp.) provide summer long flowering. In the garden center business there is a popular saying: “red flowers sell”. Among crape myrtles red flowering cultivars generally outsell all others.
Probably the most popular red variety is Dynamite®, a Carl Whitcomb introduction. Dr. Whitcomb followed with other red introductions of different sizes – Red Rocket®, Tightwad Red® and Siren Red®. The U.S. National Arboretum released ‘Arapaho’ and ‘Cheyenne’.
When deciding which red to plant, select a variety that is the appropriate size at maturity for the site. Your choices are: dwarf types (low 3 to 4 feet), semi-dwarf types (4 to 12 feet), and intermediate shrub and tree types (12 to 30 feet in height). All listed cultivars are reliably root hardy in zone 6-b and above-ground hardy in zone 7-b.
Some cultivars strut better disease and pest resistance, magnificent fall leaf color, and awesome exfoliating winter bark.
Dwarf Red-Flowered Crape Myrtles (up to 4 feet tall)
Cherry Dazzle® – low mounding shrub habit
Petite Red Imp™ – rounded head shrub
Tightwad Red® – rounded shrub with dense foliage
Victor – dwarf upright branching shrub
Semi-Dwarf Red-Flowered Crape Myrtles (from 4 to 12 feet tall)
Cheyenne – 8-10 feet tall rounded head shrub
Christiana – 8-10 feet tall upright vase-shaped shrub
Siren Red® – 10-12 feet tall upright branching shrub
Tonto – 8-10 feet tall vase-shaped shrub
Intermediate Shrub Size Red-Flowered Crape Myrtles (over 12 feet tall)
Arapaho – 20 feet tall upright branching shrub or small tree
Centennial Spirit – 10-20 feet tall stiff upright branching shrub
Dynamite® – 10-15 feet tall stiff upright branching shrub
Red Rocket® – 15-20 feet tall upright branching shrub.