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    • Asparagus fern
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    • Cocos palm & Canary Island date palm
    • Dietes, Butterfly iris
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    • Moth vine
    • Mother of millions
    • Small leaf privet
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  • Call Us +61 414 819 742 Call Us +61 414 819 742
Helensburgh Landcare Logo
+61 414 819 742
Helensburgh Landcare Logo
  • Home Home
  • Membership Membership
  • Be Weed Wise Be Weed Wise
    • Asparagus fern
    • Asthma weed
    • Black-eyed Susan
    • Blue periwinkle
    • Canna lily
    • Easter cassia
    • Cocos palm & Canary Island date palm
    • Dietes, Butterfly iris
    • English ivy
    • Formosan lily
    • Giant Bird of Paradise
    • Ginger lily
    • Japanese sacred bamboo
    • Liriope
    • Madeira vine
    • Montbretia
    • Moth vine
    • Mother of millions
    • Small leaf privet
  • Streamwatch Streamwatch
  • News and Updates News and Updates
  • Call Us +61 414 819 742 Call Us +61 414 819 742

Cape ivy

Home/ Be Weed Wise/ Cape ivy

Delairea odorata

Cape ivy, a native of southern Africa, was once widely grown as a garden ornamental. However, it is now recognised as an environmental weed, especially along the east coast of Australia. It is also a problem in NZ, Hawaii and the USA. 

Cape ivy is a climbing vine or creeping groundcover with slightly fleshy stems and leaves. The leaves are bright green, somewhat fleshy, and lobed so that they resemble ivy leaves. The stems are often purplish when young, and rather weak, eventually become woody when mature. The small yellow flower-heads are borne in dense clusters in the leaf forks or at the tips of the branches. Flowering occurs mainly during winter and spring.

Cape ivy can be highly invasive and suppresses native vegetation by carpeting the ground and climbing into the canopy. It prevents the growth and regeneration of native species

Cape ivy is spread by seed and vegetatively. Seed is dispersed by wind and water, and the stems can root at the nodes when in contact with soil creating another plant. Also, Cape ivy is often spread by the dumping of garden waste on bush land edges.

Hand weeding is the preferred method of removing Cape ivy. As it roots at the nodes, all material should be placed in your red bin, or green bin if you have FOGO (food organics green organics). Control should be undertaken before seeds have matured. Vines in trees can be cut and left to die and disintegrate.

Cape Ivy
Cape Ivy Flowers

Grow Me Instead

Snake vine, Hibbertia scandens
This local vine has bright green leaves with large yellow flowers. This is a vigorous climber or scrambler which grows to 2 to 5m wide or high.

 

Wonga wonga vine, Pandorea pandorana
This is a vigorous Australian native twining plant. A number of selected colour forms of this species have been brought into cultivation, the most common is 'Snowbells' with pure white flowers and 'Golden Showers' with yellow-bronze flowers.

25 Tunnel Road, Helensburgh,
NSW 2508 Australia

 merilyn@helensburghlandcare.org.au

 0414 819 742

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Helensburgh & District Landcare Group acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land. We pay respect to Aboriginal Elders past, present and emerging, and extend that respect to other First Nations people. We value their deep and continued spiritual and cultural connections to the land, waters and seas.

Helensburgh & District Landcare Group Inc is a non-governmental community movement dedicated to preventing land degradation and achieving sustainable land management, primarily in the 2508 postcode.

ABN: 12 869 870 867

https://landcareaustralia.org.au

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