Description
Ornamental ivy - Hedera helix ‘Tussie Mussie’
In a nutshell
Ornamental ivy, Hedera helix ‘Tussie Mussie’, This is a compact, branching variety. The leaves have 3 distinct, rounded lobes, sometimes almost like leaflets. Their surface is embossed and wrinkled.
The young leaf is mottled white at 90% and becomes greener at maturity.
Old leaves are deformed, even blistered, and take on a greyer appearance.
History
This cultivar was discovered in a nursery in Pennsylvania in the United States in 1984. It is probably a mutation of ‘Shamrock’.
Technical leaflet - Hedera helix 'Tussie Mussie'
Botanical information
- Family: Araliaceae
- Genre : Hedera
- Species : helix
- Cultivar: ‘Tussie Mussie’
- Pierot classification: ivy with bird's-foot leaves, variegated ivy
- Foliage stage: juvenile
- Origin of the species: Europe, from Spain to Norway, but little on the Atlantic coast.
- Origin of cultivar: probably a sport of ‘Shamrock’, discovered in 1984 in the United States.
Description of Hedera helix ‘Tussie Mussie’
- Growth habit: ground cover
- Number of lobes: 3 lobes in general
- Leaf length: 4 cm
- Sheet width: 5 cm
- Leaf colour: mottled medium green with white mottling
- Colour of veins: light green
- Colour of stem and petiole: greenish red
- Hairs: stellate, 3 to 5 branches
Advice on planting, cultivation and care of Hedera helix ‘Tussie Mussie’
- Exposure : sun
- Hardiness: -8°C
- Soil moisture: cool soil
- Soil PH: neutral or chalky
- Soil type: all
- Soil richness: ordinary or humus-bearing
- Use: ground cover, climber, hanging baskets, pots, window boxes
- Development: medium
- Pruning: once a year
- Pests: very rare (spider mites, mealy bugs)
- Diseases: very rare (leaf spots)
Ivy in literature
“The ivy of old age
Start with the feet that hurt.”






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