On 29/06/2014 21:02, David Hill wrote:
On 29/06/2014 18:52, sacha wrote:
On 2014-06-29 16:37:53 +0000, David Hill said:
On 29/06/2014 17:21, Sacha wrote:
On 2014-06-29 15:51:06 +0000, David Hill said:
On 29/06/2014 16:30, Stephen Wolstenholme wrote:
On Sun, 29 Jun 2014 15:57:51 +0100, Sacha
wrote:
I don't know if this pic is good enough but does anyone know which
type
of olive this is? All we know is it's an olive!
http://i59.tinypic.com/eg6l4.jpg
It looks like the usual Olea europaea to me.
Steve
see http://www.bigplantnursery.co.uk/olive_cultivars.html
There are a couple of dwarf varieties as well that I have come across
We have - or had - the 'usual' ones. This isn't it. It could be a dwarf
- bit early to tell. It's around 4' now.
That's to big for the dwarf ones.
What makes it different?
The leaf. Ray says he's had it for several years and that it was given
to him as an unusual olive. I'm suspicious that it's an olive but what
do I know?! Here's a closer pic of the leaf. It's a bit myrtle like
but the overall growth is nothing like a myrtle.
http://i57.tinypic.com/25qrm2t.jpg
As you know, if it were a Myrtle then you would get a scent from a
crushed leaf.
http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/f...psf880a043.jpg
Just about all the named fruiting varieties of Olive are grafted on to
wild Olea europaea rootstock, which has a much smaller leaf, and that is
what I would say you have there, a wild olive.
David @ a dry side of Swansea Bay
Follow-up
Found this picture of olive rootstock
http://edible.wdfiles.com/local--res...jpg/medium.jpg
But then came across this
http://www.ngkenya.com/flora/olea_capensis.html
I didn't know there was an African olive, but it could tie in with your
being told it is unusual.
David