Climbing ivy has many uses in the garden: to dress up a facade, hide an overlook, create a fence, protect tree trunks and more. They can also be used to create cascades on balconies or in apartments. In this store, we offer around 230.
One of the variants to consider is the speed of development, depending on your objective.
A reminder: climbing ivy does not damage walls or trees. Find out more here.
Hedera helix 'Little Witch'
Original twisted foliage, practically sessile, light green becoming darker when cold.
Not very branchy, slow-growing, this variety is
Hedera azorica
Native to the Azores.
Its leaves are blue-green, 8 x 12 cm, simple and alternate. They are palmate and
Hedera helix 'Frisé
Foliage with beautiful mauve-tinted curling indentations.
Leaves supported by long red petioles.
Quite vigorous, moderately
Hedera helix 'Humpty Dumpty
Adult form of Erecta, slow-growing, forming balls of dark green foliage.
A boxwood substitute for some landscapers.
Blooms in
Hedera helix 'Minicoup' (Minicup)
Highly branched, the long branches bear small green leaves with 3 lobes, the central one being twice as long.
Hedera helix 'Stella' mutation
Polymorphic variety with regularly long, narrow leaves with two prominent lobes towards the base of the petiole.
Hedera helix 'Mariposa' (Mariposa)
A variety with atypical butterfly-wing-shaped leaves. There is great diversity in the leaves, rarely two.
Hedera helix 'Chedglow Fasciated
Wavy form with very short shoots and yellow-green marbled foliage.
Hedera helix 'Lustrous Carpet'
Its young foliage is lemon-yellow, later turning dark green.
Bright in partial shade, but best reserved for
Hedera helix 'Green Heart
Spontaneous appearance in the garden from an endemic ivy.
Quite branchy, the stems with long internodes bear leaves.