Posted by Jo on April 17, 2011, 4:16 pm
I have a small olive tree that was bought for me as a present some years
ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved house
and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the plant.
Posted by rbel on April 18, 2011, 4:13 pm
>I have a small olive tree that was bought for me as a present some years
>ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
>I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved house
>and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
>it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
>I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the plant.
Whilst I am definitely no expert on olive trees, we have had a small
one in a container on our terrace for several years. It was planted
in John Innes 3 compost in a 50 cms earthenware pot and located in a
south west facing position. It is now over a metre tall and a good
shape due to an annual trim. Apart from watering every couple of
weeks and a half strength dose of miracle grow twice a year we neglect
it.
rbel
Posted by 'Mike' on April 18, 2011, 4:18 pm
>>I have a small olive tree that was bought for me as a present some years
>>ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
>>I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved
>>house
>>and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
>>it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
>>I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the
>>plant.
>>
> Whilst I am definitely no expert on olive trees, we have had a small
> one in a container on our terrace for several years. It was planted
> in John Innes 3 compost in a 50 cms earthenware pot and located in a
> south west facing position. It is now over a metre tall and a good
> shape due to an annual trim. Apart from watering every couple of
> weeks and a half strength dose of miracle grow twice a year we neglect
> it.
> rbel
Planted on the birth of a baby in the family?
That is the tradition in Countires where Olive Tree Plantations grow, that
an Olive Tree is planted so that when the 'baby' matures, the tree matures
so the 'baby' will always have an income.
Mike
--
...................................
Remember, a statue has never been erected to a critic.
...................................
>
Posted by Paul Luton on April 19, 2011, 12:58 pm
On 18/04/2011 21:13, rbel@rbel1.plus.com wrote:
>> I have a small olive tree that was bought for me as a present some years
>> ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
>> I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved house
>> and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
>> it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
>> I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the plant.
>>
> Whilst I am definitely no expert on olive trees, we have had a small
> one in a container on our terrace for several years. It was planted
> in John Innes 3 compost in a 50 cms earthenware pot and located in a
> south west facing position. It is now over a metre tall and a good
> shape due to an annual trim. Apart from watering every couple of
> weeks and a half strength dose of miracle grow twice a year we neglect
> it.
> rbel
Any hints about the annual trim? Ours is getting
rather misshaped due to strong growth in the wrong place.
Posted by rbel on April 21, 2011, 5:16 pm
On Tue, 19 Apr 2011 17:58:43 +0100, Paul Luton
>On 18/04/2011 21:13, rbel@rbel1.plus.com wrote:
>>
>>> I have a small olive tree that was bought for me as a present some years
>>> ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
>>> I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved house
>>> and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
>>> it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
>>> I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the plant.
>>>
>>
>> Whilst I am definitely no expert on olive trees, we have had a small
>> one in a container on our terrace for several years. It was planted
>> in John Innes 3 compost in a 50 cms earthenware pot and located in a
>> south west facing position. It is now over a metre tall and a good
>> shape due to an annual trim. Apart from watering every couple of
>> weeks and a half strength dose of miracle grow twice a year we neglect
>> it.
>>
>> rbel
>>
>Any hints about the annual trim? Ours is getting
>rather misshaped due to strong growth in the wrong place.
Our tree is not grown for fruit (although it does produce some) so I
now snip it back to what I consider to be a pleasing shape each
spring. I didn't touch it for the first four years and then removed
all the unwanted growth, cutting just above a shoot that looked as
though it was pointing in a reasonable direction. It then gets the
first of its bi-annual feeds.
rbel
>ago. It used to reside on a west-facing wall but didn't grow much at all.
>I re-potted it to a larger pot, but still nothing. I have since moved house
>and wonder where to place the tree in the new garden. Also, should I take
>it out of the pot and replant in a bed?
>I'd be grateful for any advice as I don't really want to discard the plant.