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| Broadway, you did'nt say if you have the tree outdoors or indoors. If it is indoors the leaves may have dried up due to central heating. If it is outdoors it may be suffering from frost or wind-burn. Let us have a little more info about it. ![]()
__________________ And when you're back stops aching, And you're hands begin to harden. You will find yourself a partner, In the glory of the garden. Rudyard Kipling. |
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| Here's thread from a few years back where SueA & I compare olive trees!!! ![]() growing olives trees olive guide
__________________ Manda. "Wouldn't it be nice For maybe an hour To not have a care." Last edited by smallblueplanet; 20-01-2008 at 06:54 PM. |
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| Olive trees are very hardy, mine is out all year in all weather! i did try to cover it with fleece but it blew away in 2 days LOL The french have terrible winters too and the trees can stand even severe frost which splits the whole tree, they just regrow, may not be happy about it though. i don't know why yours would have brittle leaves , just keep an eye on it, maybe feed it or freshen its soil, depends where you got it from and how old it is, is the pot too small? maybe some expert grape can help. hope it is ok, they are lovely trees |
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| I think the trees are too warm when they want to be dormant and cold. In this area and especially in Italy/Spain, the trees are outside in orchards all year and unless there is some sort of catastophe natural, they all survive quite well in longer-term temperatures of frost that you usually don't see in the UK.
__________________ TonyF, Dordogne 24220 |
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| Here is my olive tree which stays out with no protection all year round, admitedly it is a mature 100+ years old, all I do is feed once in the winter with a fair amount of slow release fertiliser I dont even water ( cos it rains enough in winter ) in summer I water once a week and feed with tomato food once a month, it has thousands of tiny white flowers sometime around the end of spring but although thousands of fruit set they dont tend to mature into full size olives as the climate isnt warm enough in the summer here, probably around 50 or 60 olives grow to full size but thats all. Cheers Chris ![]() |
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| How lovely crichmond. I bought a little olive tree year before last from Lidl. It 'died' last winter so I stood the pot outside all summer and totally ignored it. I noticed a week ago that it now has new 'branches' growing below the previous growth - it is still outside as it seems quite happy there. |
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| They are pretty hardy shirl and can come back from loking like they are dead, Im glad yours appears to be doing just that. Obviously the one in the picture is my pride and joy, as you may be able to see I have built my patio table out of concrete to resemble a greek pillar and used a patio circle as the tabletop leaving out the inner ring this left the 2 foot opening to put the plant pot in. The thing on the wall in the background is a reproduction of one of the elgin marbles Ive still got to finish the patio by putting 2 more marbles on the other 2 walls and I need to paint it all as well. Should look good when its finished, I hope. PS. in case your wondering why, I am half greek and love the country. |
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| ah, i had an olive tree seedling, but stupidly left it indoors rather than outdoors whilst i went away for the christmas break and when i came back it had dried up, the leaves were brittle like broadway said above, it must have got too hot from the central heating. any advice grapes? should i put it outside and hope for a miraculous recovery? |
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| If you move it outside now it will almost certainly shock it. they need to aclimatise slowly to the cold especially if small. My advice is keep it where it is and water it till water comes out of the bottom then pour any excess away and dont water again until the surface of the soil is dry if it starts showing signs of recovery start feeding as you would a tomato plant until it has a decent amount of foilage returned ie once a week then once a month when recovered during summer. never leave it sitting in water as this will rot the roots. |
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| thank you very much for the advice! i will try that, and i sincerely hope it does recover, because i have been wanting an olive tree for ages, and was looking forward to watching it (slowly slowly) develop over the years. as you can imagine, i was gutted when i realised i had almost certainly killed it... |
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| I bought an olive tree from Woolworths in Feb and planted it back in March, it was a tiny twig of a thing but over the summer its bloomed well, one 'branch' has extended, there are leaves all over, and there might be another branch growing out of the trunk. It's pretty small, I was wondering how long it'd take to start looking like an actual tree (not a huge one mind you, maybe just a meter tall?)
__________________ I used to think I was indecisive, now I'm not so sure! |
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| I bought one at a car boot the summer before last. It is about 3 ft high and looks like a standard. I left it out on the patio all winter and it's fine. This summer it had loads of flowers but the olives are tiny.I don't think I will ever get full size ones as the summer just isn't good or long enough. |
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| hi all, i have an olive tree i bought this year, it has loads of olives on it all different sizes, some are tiny and some are about half an inch, the tiny ones are turning black, should i take them ones off so the goodness goes to the bigger ones, my tree is about 2 ft but looking very healthy Last edited by ardroil; 29-09-2008 at 09:13 PM. Reason: spelling |
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(not a huge one mind you, maybe just a meter tall?)
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