Shamrock
Evergreen · Female · Black berries · Zones 4-9
Cold-hardy compact male; a good pollinator and hedge plant.
Nordic belongs to the inkberry holly, grown for its foliage and the reliable structure it brings to the garden year-round. Below is a full profile of Nordic — its characteristics, how to grow it, whether it needs a pollinator for berries, and answers to the questions gardeners ask most.
As one of the inkberry holly, Nordic carries the traits gardeners look for in the group. Ilex glabra is a native, deer-resistant boxwood substitute with inky black fruit, valued for thriving in the damp, acidic sites many shrubs cannot handle.
Nordic is evergreen and hardy across USDA zones 4-9, so it suits a wide range of gardens with the right acidic, well-drained soil and seasonal care.
Nordic makes a rounded, twiggy, spreading evergreen shrub, typically around 3-4 ft tall and 4 to 8 feet wide, tidier in modern cultivars. Its foliage is small, smooth, rounded, spineless dark-green leaves. Knowing a holly's mature size and habit is the key to placing it well: give Nordic room to reach its full spread without crowding, which also keeps air moving through the plant and disease at bay.
Nordic is a male holly. It bears no berries of its own; its value is as a pollinator, supplying the pollen that nearby female hollies need to fruit — and as a handsome evergreen in its own right.
Plant Nordic where it will get full sun to part shade in acidic, moist, well-drained soil. Full sun gives the densest growth. Set the plant at the depth it grew in the pot, water it deeply while it establishes, and mulch the root zone to hold moisture and keep the soil cool and acidic.
Nordic suits boxwood-alternative hedges, foundation plantings, rain gardens and wet sites, and deer-resistant plantings. Mass compact cultivars such as Gem Box as a low native hedge, or use inkberry in a rain garden with other moisture-lovers.
Inkberry tolerates wet, acidic soil that defeats other shrubs, as well as ordinary garden ground, in full sun to part shade. Watch for the usual holly troubles — leaf miner, scale, and spider mites, and root rot in soggy ground — and head them off with the right site, good drainage, and good air flow. Yellowing leaves usually signal alkaline soil or poor drainage rather than disease.
Nordic grows into a rounded, twiggy, spreading evergreen shrub, typically reaching 3-4 ft tall and 4 to 8 feet wide, tidier in modern cultivars. Its final size depends on your climate, the site, and how you prune it.
No. Nordic is a male holly, so it does not bear berries. Its role is to pollinate nearby female hollies so that they can fruit.
Nordic is evergreen, holding its small, smooth, rounded, spineless dark-green leaves through the winter.
Nordic is hardy in USDA zones 4-9. That range describes the winter cold it can survive; gardeners colder than zone 4 should give it a sheltered site or choose a hardier holly.
Inkberry tolerates wet, acidic soil that defeats other shrubs, as well as ordinary garden ground, in full sun to part shade. Give Nordic an acidic, well-drained soil and the ordinary seasonal care any holly appreciates, and it is a straightforward, low-maintenance shrub.
Prune Nordic in late winter, while it is dormant and before spring growth begins — that shapes the plant without removing the flower buds that become the next season's berries.