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#1
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Olive Tree
Hi All. I have a standard olive tree growing in a pot on our balcony
(south-facing & we are in N. Derbyshire) and am wondering what to do as the colder weather approaches - I would hate to lose it as it is doing so well. Would it be best to bring inside or leave it outside but provide frost protection or will it be ok just left as it is? If frost protection is required how do I best go about this? Many thanks in advance. Tracey |
#2
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Olive Tree
The message
from "Tracey" contains these words: Hi All. I have a standard olive tree growing in a pot on our balcony (south-facing & we are in N. Derbyshire) and am wondering what to do as the colder weather approaches - I would hate to lose it as it is doing so well. Would it be best to bring inside or leave it outside but provide frost protection or will it be ok just left as it is? If frost protection is required how do I best go about this? How cold does it get? (There's Derbyshire-in-a-hole, and Derbyshire-on-a-lump, and I don't need to tell you that the lumpy bits can be pretty chilly.) Olive trees usually do better outside in the winter, and if it only gets medium-cold I'd wrap the pot with something like bubble-wrap. -- Rusty horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co full-stop uk http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
#3
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Olive Tree
Tracey wrote:
Hi All. I have a standard olive tree growing in a pot on our balcony (south-facing & we are in N. Derbyshire) and am wondering what to do as the colder weather approaches - I would hate to lose it as it is doing so well. Would it be best to bring inside or leave it outside but provide frost protection or will it be ok just left as it is? If frost protection is required how do I best go about this? Mine live outside against a S facing wall in N Yorkshire. I do lose a few tips of branches each year to the winter weather, but it always grows back again. If you are worried add some bubble wrap around the pot and a thin horticultural fleece over the top. Free air movement and dry (ie not waterlogged) roots are probably more important than frost. Continental climates are cold dry. An unheated porch is another place to over winter them. I reckon it might be worth putting them in a cold greenhouse in March so that they get a longer growing season of warmth. Left outside mine sometimes don't come back into full leaf and active growth until July. I have never had a ripe olive - although some years they set fruit. Regards, Martin Brown |
#4
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Olive Tree
Thanks for the advice guys! I'll leave it outside and protect it from frost
when the real cold sets in ) Tracey |
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