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Old 10-11-2004, 07:25 PM
David WE Roberts
 
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On Wed, 10 Nov 2004 16:55:09 +0000, Pam Moore wrote:

On Wed, 10 Nov 2004 15:59:23 +0000, David WE Roberts
wrote:

Over a normal winter I would expect to leave it outside, but long term
harsh conditions may not suit it.

I have the option to:

bring it into the sun lounge at the first forecast of really nasty weather
bring it in when the nasty weather starts
bring it in now (and subject it to occasional burst of warmth on sunny
days)


David, how big is your olive tree, and how big its pot.


The tree is about 6' from the tip of the tippiest bit down to the surface
of the pot.

However the trunk is less than 1" in diameter at the thickest part - I
guess it must be 2-3 years old.

The pot is about 16" diameter at the top tapering down to about 10" at the
bottom.


Mine has been outdoors for the last few winters. It's in a 10 inch pot
and is 20 years old, but I cut it back to about 15 - 18 inches each
winter so it will fit under a covered shelf next to the house and it
is therefore kept dry. I have also tried wrapping the pot in bubble
wrap and the tree in fleece. As I have no greenhouse or sunroom, the
only other option is to bring it in to my living room. I would only do
this if we had severe weather.
I do the same with a pomegranate, and now have a fig to cope with
also!


I am not so worried about my Brown Turkey fig, which seems very robust and
lives out over winter.


I'm sure they would be happier with a sunroom or cold greenhouse, but
in my case, needs must!

Pam in Bristol