Actinidia kolomikta is an
ornamental plant for gardens and a
houseplant. The plant was collected by
Charles Maries in
Sapporo, on the northern Japanese island of
Hokkaido, where the plant was locally called
miyamatatabi, in 1878, and sent to his patrons,
Veitch Nurseries, who introduced it into Western horticulture.
Actinidia kolomikta is cultivated in cold temperate regions as an
ornamental plant, largely for the striking random
variegation in pink and white of some its leaves but also because of the relatively small (2-5 g) berries it produces, resembling small
kiwifruit. There are a number of named cultivars bred for the latter purpose in Russia and Poland, though it takes years for a plant to start yielding, and because
A. kolomikta is
dioecious, a male
pollenizer plant is required for the wild vines and most of the cultivars. This plant has gained the
Royal Horticultural Society's
Award of Garden Merit.
Pests The plant is attractive to
cats, which find it more attractive than
catnip or
valerian and can severely damage the vine. An early propagator in Boston found all his pots of the newly introduced plant bitten to stubs in his greenhouse, before his cat was discovered to be the culprit. ==Etymology==