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Olea europaea (Olive)

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Helpful articles

Planning your garden. Learn how to design a garden using a step-by-step approach.

Native Hibiscus. An ever increasing interest in native hibiscus has led to the horticultural development of a number of new cultivars which rival the exotic types in beauty and flower size.

Ground covers.

Best Australian natives for pots & small gardens. The trend towards smaller gardens has inspired the plant lovers in the nursery industry to respond with an ever-increasing range of Australian plants that will delight those who want to attract birds and butterflies and bring a little bit of the bush onto their balconies. From banksias to bottlebrush there are plants that will add colour and texture to provide year round interest.

Plant description

olive

olea europaea olive 512

The olive is a handsome, drought hardy evergreen tree from the Mediterranean. Very long lived, some 2,000 year old  trees are still bearing fruit. They have gnarled trunks and silvery leaves that don't tend to shed. Olives bear fruit in autumn and winter, which must be processed to remove the bitterness.

Olives are easy care plants, troubled by few pests or diseases. They do dislike waterlogging, and soils that are too rich canl encourage disease. Olives can be pruned to shape.

The olive is one of the most cited plants in western literature, going back 5,000 years. Olives have been providing food, medicine and high quality oil for millenia.  The olive leaf is a symbol of abundance, glory and peace

Additional plant information

Flowers

Flower colour: white
Flowering season: summer

Plant size

Maximum height: 9 metres
Minimum height: 6 metres

Maximum width: 6 metres
Minimum width: not specified

Sunlight, frost & salt tolerance

This plant will tolerate full sunlight.
Light frost tolerance.
Plant is salt tolerant.

Fauna attracting?

Yes. Attracts: Rabbits and kangaroos like to eat the bark.

Climate

This plant species will grow in the following climates: cool, temperate, subtropical, arid.

Soil types & conditions

Loam: dry, moist, well-drained.

Clay: dry, well-drained.

Sand: dry, moist, well-drained.

Soil pH: 6.5-8

Diseases

Peacock Spot (Cycloconium oleaginum).

Pests

scale, caterpillars, olive lace bug

Miscellaneous information

Planting season: all except winter.

Types of fertiliser: Well rotted manure applied in autumn and winter, and lime.

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