Description
Ornamental ivy - Hedera helix ‘Green Heart’
In a nutshell
Ornamental ivy, Hedera helix ‘Green Heart’, is a spontaneous appearance in Olivier Arcelus's garden from a local ivy.
This is a fairly branchy ivy. The stems have long internodes and 4 cm diameter olive-green leaves. The base of the leaves is heart-shaped.
It is a good climber.
History
This cultivar was found in the garden of Olivier Arcelus. It is a mutation of a local ivy.
Technical details - Hedera helix 'Green Heart'
Botanical information
- Family: Araliaceae
- Genre : Hedera
- Species : helix
- Cultivar : ‘Green Heart’
- Pierot classification: heart-shaped ivy
- Foliage stage: juvenile
- Origin of the species: Europe, from Spain to Norway, but little on the Atlantic coast.
- Origin of cultivar: selected by Olivier Arcelus
Description of Hedera helix ‘Green Heart’
- Growth habit: spreading
- Number of lobes: 3 lobes in general
- Leaf length: 4 cm
- Sheet width: 4 cm
- Colour of leaf: olive green
- Colour of veins: light green
- Internodes: long
- Colour of stem and petiole: pink
- Hairs: stellate, 3 to 5 branches
Planting, growing and care instructions for Hedera helix ‘Green Heart’
- Exposure: shade, part shade, sun
- Hardiness: -15°C
- Soil moisture: cool soil
- Soil PH: neutral or chalky
- Soil type: all
- Soil richness: ordinary or humus-bearing
- Use: ground cover, climber
- Development: moderate
- Pruning: once a year
- Pests: very rare (spider mites, mealy bugs)
- Diseases: very rare (leaf spots)
A page from my little ivy encyclopaedia
The occasional question ...
How are new ivies selected?
There are two ways of selecting new ivy:
1 - in a given variety, one or more branches appear differently from the rest of the plant. This is known as a mutation. This is a common phenomenon in ivy. It naturally produces new shapes or colours that are interesting to observe. By taking cuttings from this original branching, you create a new variety of ivy.
2 - by observing populations of ivy in the wild. Some may be completely original and different from previously known forms of ivy.
In the first case, the parentage is perfectly clear. We can say that the new variety is a mutation (or a sport) of a particular cultivar. In the second case, it is more difficult, if not impossible, to establish the parentage of the new variety discovered.
In all cases, you need to make sure that this new variety is of real interest, particularly aesthetically or botanically, and of course check that it hasn't already been spotted by someone else and is therefore completely different from anything you've known before.
Ivy in literature
“The ivy embraced the mutilated statues, giving them new life.»





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