Escallonia 'Iveyi' | |
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Genus | Escallonia |
Cultivar | 'Iveyi' |
Origin | Caerhays Castle, Cornwall |
Escallonia 'Iveyi' is a hybrid cultivar planted as a garden ornamental. The cultivar originated as a natural hybrid seedling discovered in the garden of Caerhays Castle in Cornwall. The cultivar was named for the Caerhays estate's gardener, David Ivey, by Edgar Thurston in his book British & foreign trees and shrubs in Cornwall. Thurston believed it to be a hybrid of E. montevidensis and E. × exonensis (E. rosea × E. rubra)., whereas others later adjudged the female parent to be E. bifida. The shrub was accorded the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Merit in 1926, and the Award of Garden Merit in 1993.
Description
'Iveyi' is an evergreen shrub growing to between 1.5 and 2.5 m high, with a similar spread, bearing glossy dark green foliage. Panicles of white flowers appear in the summer.
Cultivation
The cultivar prefers a moist well-drained soil and a sunny or partly shaded situation. Propagation is from semi-mature cuttings of the current season's growth.
References
- Royal Horticultural Society (Great Britain). (1943). Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society. The Society.
- ^ Edgar Thurston (1930). British & foreign trees and shrubs in Cornwall. Pub. for the Royal Institution of Cornwall by the Cambridge University Press.
- Hillier & Sons. (1977). Hilliers' Manual of Trees and Shrubs, 4th Edition. David & Charles, Newton Abbot, England. ISBN 0-7153-7460-5
- ^ "Escallonia 'Iveyi' AGM". Plant Selector. Royal Horticultural Society. Retrieved 19 June 2020.