Flowering Crabapple 'Prairie Fire'

Malus

Family
Rosaceae (ro-ZAY-see-ee)
Genus
Malus (MAY-lus)
Synonym
Spacing
12-15 ft. (3.6-4.7 m)
15-20 ft. (4.7-6 m)
Hardiness
12-15 ft. (3.6-4.7 m)
Sun Exposure
USDA Zone 3a: to -39.9 °C (-40 °F)
USDA Zone 3b: to -37.2 °C (-35 °F)
USDA Zone 4a: to -34.4 °C (-30 °F)
USDA Zone 4b: to -31.6 °C (-25 °F)
USDA Zone 5a: to -28.8 °C (-20 °F)
USDA Zone 5b: to -26.1 °C (-15 °F)
USDA Zone 6a: to -23.3 °C (-10 °F)
USDA Zone 6b: to -20.5 °C (-5 °F)
USDA Zone 7a: to -17.7 °C (0 °F)
USDA Zone 7b: to -14.9 °C (5 °F)
USDA Zone 8a: to -12.2 °C (10 °F)
USDA Zone 8b: to -9.4 °C (15 °F)
Bloom Time
Grown for foliage
Deciduous
Other Details
Other details
Full Sun
Propagation Methods
N/A
Patent Information
Pink
Rose/Mauve
Pollination
Late Winter/Early Spring
Mid Spring
Bearing Habit
Rootstock Vigor
From softwood cuttings
By grafting
By budding
Disease Resistance
Fruit Usage
Remove fleshy coating on seeds before storing
Properly cleaned, seed can be successfully stored
N/A: plant does not set seed, flowers are sterile, or plants will not come true from seed
Foliage Color
Bloom Characteristics
Water Requirements
Where to Grow
Trees
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Walnut Creek, California

South Windsor, Connecticut

Rathdrum, Idaho

Bradley, Illinois

Carol Stream, Illinois

Spring Grove, Illinois

Dawson, Iowa

Fort Dodge, Iowa

Urbandale, Iowa

Andover, Kansas

Clermont, Kentucky

Georgetown, Kentucky

Lexington, Kentucky

Louisville, Kentucky

Alfred, Maine

Gobles, Michigan

Mattawan, Michigan

Stephenson, Michigan

Tecumseh, Michigan

Traverse City, Michigan

Whitmore Lake, Michigan

Kearney, Nebraska

Rutherford, New Jersey

Clyde, North Carolina

Bucyrus, Ohio

Enid, Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma(2 reports)

Albany, Oregon

Chiloquin, Oregon

West Grove, Pennsylvania

Tremonton, Utah

Virginia Beach, Virginia

Ames Lake, Washington

Redmond, Washington

Stanwood, Washington

Union Hill-Novelty Hill, Washington

show all

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Gardener's Notes:

10
positives
3
neutrals
0
negative
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Sort By:
P
West Grove, PA | April 2017 | positive

I almost didn't buy Prairie Fire because the name made me think it would be an orangey red, which I'm generally not that fond of, at leas...Read More

K
Carol Stream, IL | July 2016 | neutral

I've had two Prairiefire crabapples. I dug out one that didn't have a nice shape to it. I've had the other for about 10 years. While it'...Read More

G
Albany, OR | May 2013 | positive

I have had this crabapple for close to ten years. It's done quite well with very little care or supplemental water in a fairly dry soil ...Read More

H
Walnut Creek, CA | May 2013 | neutral

I had three of these trees in my garden and had to remove one because it was so badly harmed by scale insects. A second tree gets scale e...Read More

P
Manteo, NC | May 2013 | positive

I have had Prairie Fire for fifteen years on Roanoke Island North Carolina. It has done well every year Seedlings of couse are not Prairi...Read More

G
Middlebury, VT | May 2013 | positive

When we lived in central Wisconsin (54971), we had a garden bed adjacent to our house that apparently hosted verticilium wilt. After a Na...Read More

M
Washington Grove, MD | May 2013 | positive

Prairiefire is one of my all-time favorite trees. I first planted it in a city-sized front yard in Boston, where I knew it will just sque...Read More

Z
Thornton, CO | January 2013 | positive

I have 3 of these planted on the west side of my property on the northeastern plains/edge of foothills of Rocky Mountains in Colorado. T...Read More

J
Oklahoma City, OK | January 2013 | positive

Having worked for several years in a nursery that sells this variety, and having watched other varieties succumb to every nasty disease t...Read More

C
Redmond, WA | October 2011 | positive

Beautiful tree for the Pacific Northwest and very resistant to disease. The mild wet winters and spring here encourage black spot and ot...Read More

J
South Windsor, CT (Zone 6a) | September 2010 | positive

I first saw this tree in a gardening magazine that was featuring some of the finer crabapples available. I was fortunate to find one at ...Read More

O
Chiloquin, OR | August 2008 | positive

I live in zone 4/5 and am finding this is a somewhat slower grower than some other trees, however, it is thriving considering our short g...Read More

M
M
Timnath, CO (Zone 5b) | July 2007 | neutral

I don't see why this cultivar is supposed to be so fantastic. It is pretty in the spring but I think 'Profusion' is much more beautiful.

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