Description
Ornamental ivy - Hedera helix ‘Direktor Badke’
In a nutshell
Ornamental ivy, Hedera helix ‘Direktor Badke’, is a compact, very bushy ivy with moderate growth.
It has smooth, three-lobed foliage resembling clover. The lobes are rounded and so shallow that the leaf sometimes looks deltoid. The leaf blade is light green and well veined. It can turn red in dry, cold weather. The base of the leaf is cordate.
Because of its low winter hardiness, this ivy should be used in pots or as a houseplant, or in sheltered areas of the garden.
History
This cultivar was discovered by Schmidt Nurseries in Bockum Hövel, Germany. It is a mutation of ‘Merion Beauty’ obtained in 1954.
Detailed sheet - Hedera helix 'Director Badke'
Botanical information
- Family: Araliaceae
- Genre : Hedera
- Species : helix
- Cultivar: ‘Direktor Bade’
- 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: sport of ‘Merion Beauty’, selected by Schmidt Nurseries in Bockum Hövel, Germany, in 1954.
Description of Hedera helix ‘Direktor Backe’
- Port : compact
- Number of lobes: 3 lobes in general
- Leaf length: 3 to 4 cm
- Leaf width: 3 to 4 cm
- Colour of leaf: light green
- Leaf colour variation: may turn red in dry, cold weather
- Colour of veins: yellow-green
- Colour of stem and petiole: purple
- Branches: well branched
- Hairs: stellate, 3 to 5 branches
Planting, cultivation and care instructions for Hedera helix ‘Direktor Badke’
- Exposure: shade, part shade, sun
- Hardiness: -10°C
- Soil moisture: cool soil
- Soil PH: neutral or chalky
- Soil type: all
- Soil richness: ordinary or humus-bearing
- Use: ground cover, pots, window boxes, rockery
- Development: moderate
- Pruning: once a year
- Pests: very rare (spider mites, mealy bugs)
- Diseases: very rare (leaf spots)
Ivy in literature
“Ivy enveloped the house, as if nature were trying to protect it from oblivion.”







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