Small, lobeless or three-lobed leaves, curved downwards.

Blade mottled with creamy white, lemon yellow, grey-green and dark green.

A fast-growing cultivar that prefers sunny locations. Use as ground cover or in rock gardens, pots, window boxes, hanging baskets, etc.

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Description

Ornamental ivy - Hedera helix ‘Baby Gold Dust’

In a nutshell

Ornamental ivy, Hedera helix ‘Baby Gold Dust’, The leaves are small, lobeless or three-lobed and curved downwards.

The leaf blade is mottled with creamy white, lemon yellow, grey-green and dark green.

This is a fast-growing cultivar that prefers sunny locations. You can use it as ground cover or in rock gardens, in pots, window boxes, hanging baskets, etc.

This variety of ivy is a mutation of ‘Gold Dust‘.

History

This variety of ivy is a mutation of ‘Gold Dust‘.

Technical details - Hedera helix 'Baby Gold Dust'

Botanical information

  • Family: Araliaceae
  • Genre : Hedera
  • Species : helix
  • Cultivar: ‘Baby Gold Dust’
  • Pierot classification: variegated ivy, type ivy
  • Foliage stage: juvenile
  • Origin of the species: Europe, from Spain to Norway, but little on the Atlantic coast.
  • Origin of cultivar: mutation of ‘Gold Dust’

 

Description of Hedera helix ‘Baby Gold Dust’

  • Port : compact
  • Number of lobes: 0 or 3 lobes in general
  • Leaf length: 3.5 cm
  • Sheet width: 3 cm
  • Leaf colour: light green, speckled with dark green, yellow or grey-green
  • Colour of veins: green-yellow
  • Colour of stem and petiole: greenish red
  • Hairs: stellate, 3 to 5 branches

 

Planting, cultivation and care instructions for Hedera helix ‘Baby Gold Dust’

  • Exposure : 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, rockery, pots, window boxes, hanging baskets
  • Development: rapid
  • Pruning: once a year
  • Pests: very rare (spider mites, mealy bugs)
  • Diseases: very rare (leaf spots)

A page from my little ivy encyclopaedia

All your questions about ivy

Do all ivies crawl?

The vast majority of ivy plants are creeping and make excellent ground cover. But here, as elsewhere, there are exceptions.

Some ivy forms a rounded tuft that doesn't spread out. They are perfect for rock gardens, for example. These include ‘Pittsburg’, ‘Ralf’ and ‘Perkeo’. 

Others form a small shrub erect. This is particularly true of ‘Congesta’ and ‘Erecta’. Their stems are upright rather than creeping.

Finally, all the ivy adults have a shrubby habit. These varieties were able to crawl during their juvenile stage. But when they reach the adult stage, they stop crawling and climbing. Multiplication of mature plants produces mature plants, which will not crawl.

La boutique du lierre - guirlande de lierre

Ivy in literature

“The ivy caressed the stone with tenderness, as if to erase the passage of the centuries.

Victor Hugo, Les Contemplations

Additional information

Weight N/A
Stock of 1-litre cups and pots

3 to 5 pots

Stock 2 or 4 litre containers

1 to 2 containers

Large stock items

0 big topic

General appearance

Fairly branched, Compact

Type of foliage and colour

Atypical, Yellow variegated

Possible uses

Ground cover, Pots or planters, Rockwork, Hanging lamp

Exhibition

Sun

Hardiness

Good hardiness

Easy to grow

Easy

Speed

Fast

Vigorous development

Medium

Classification according to the Pierot system

From 'Pittsburgh', Ivy type, variegated

Reward obtained

No known reward

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