Family: Araliaceae

Scientific Name: Hedera helix Baltic

Common Name: Baltic Ivy

DescriptionA hardy form of the English Ivy. Clings to rough surfaces by adventitious roots growing from the stem.
Pronunciation(HEAD-er-ah)(HEE-licks)
Plant TypeAll Plants, Vines
Hardiness Zone5
Sunlightgrows best in shade or half day of light (morning)
Moistureprefers moist tolerates average to dry once established
Soil & Sitetolerates a wide range, prefers moist, rich well drained slightly acidic
Flowersoccurs on mature plants, not showy, pale green
Leavesglossy dark green, paler on underside, whitish veins, 3-5 lobes
Rootsfiborsis, adventitious roots can occur at nodes, used to attach to strutures
Propagationcuttings
Cultivar OriginBaltic Ivy was discovered by Alfred Rehder in Russia He found it growing as a ground cover in the pine woods near Riga, Latvia . This area is cold and outside of the known hardiness of this plant. Collected around 1907.(Aronold Arboretum, UM Harvard University Bulletin Series 3, Vol 6, 3-29-1932)
Misc FactsCan be invasive especially in warmer climates.
Notes & Reference#62-Manual of Climbers and Wall Plants (Burras, Griffiths), #68-Groundcovers for the Midwest (Voight,Hamilton,Giles)
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