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Ewald Schroder 24-06-2003 03:20 AM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 
Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)

Mike Lyle 25-06-2003 02:57 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 
(Ewald Schroder) wrote in message . com...
Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)


I think they heat-treat the olives for commercial sale. But one of the
British gardening gurus, Geoffrey Smith, says the stones from tinned
peaches will often germinate, so maybe olives will too: they certainly
seem tough enough!

Why not swipe a few fresh olives from established Californian trees?
But my book says they're typically propagated by grafts or layers,
"occasionally from seed", so it doesn't sound promising.

Mike.

AndWhyNot 25-06-2003 05:44 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 
On 25 Jun 2003 06:49:59 -0700, (Mike Lyle)
wrote:

(Ewald Schroder) wrote in message . com...
Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)


I think they heat-treat the olives for commercial sale. But one of the
British gardening gurus, Geoffrey Smith, says the stones from tinned
peaches will often germinate, so maybe olives will too: they certainly
seem tough enough!


How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??



Ophelia 25-06-2003 05:44 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 

"AndWhyNot" wrote in message

How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Ve haf vays...................................



Thes 25-06-2003 05:56 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 


AndWhyNot wrote:
On 25 Jun 2003 06:49:59 -0700, (Mike Lyle)
wrote:


(Ewald Schroder) wrote in message . com...

Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)


I think they heat-treat the olives for commercial sale. But one of the
British gardening gurus, Geoffrey Smith, says the stones from tinned
peaches will often germinate, so maybe olives will too: they certainly
seem tough enough!



How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Your martini glasses are too small, methinks.


AndWhyNot 25-06-2003 06:56 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 
On Wed, 25 Jun 2003 17:57:20 +0100, Thes
wrote:



AndWhyNot wrote:
On 25 Jun 2003 06:49:59 -0700, (Mike Lyle)
wrote:


(Ewald Schroder) wrote in message . com...

Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)

I think they heat-treat the olives for commercial sale. But one of the
British gardening gurus, Geoffrey Smith, says the stones from tinned
peaches will often germinate, so maybe olives will too: they certainly
seem tough enough!



How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Your martini glasses are too small, methinks.


Ah Ha! I wondered why my martinis had no effect ........ maybe I
should mix them in my 2 gallon watering can, after washing out the
liquid manure .........



Sacha 25-06-2003 06:56 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 
in article , Ophelia at
wrote on 25/6/03 5:40 pm:


"AndWhyNot" wrote in message

How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Ve haf vays...................................


But of course. Build a bigger Martini. No problem.
--

Sacha


Ophelia 25-06-2003 07:08 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 

"Sacha" wrote in message
...
in article , Ophelia at
wrote on 25/6/03 5:40 pm:


"AndWhyNot" wrote in message

How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Ve haf vays...................................


But of course. Build a bigger Martini. No problem.



nodnodnod

:)



Ophelia 25-06-2003 07:08 PM

Getting Olive Stones to Germinate
 

"AndWhyNot" wrote in message
s.com...
On Wed, 25 Jun 2003 17:57:20 +0100, Thes
wrote:



AndWhyNot wrote:
On 25 Jun 2003 06:49:59 -0700, (Mike Lyle)
wrote:


(Ewald Schroder) wrote in message

. com...

Has anyone out there ever managed to get the stones from pickled
olives to sprout? Any tips would be welcome. Even if the success rate
is close to zero, surely one will sprout eventually if I were to plant
enough stones? Lets face it, there's nothing better than nurturing
your own plants from seed. I'm trying to get some pickled stones to
germinate at the moment in a sunny, warm outdoor location (no, not
britain, but north carolina USA, which gets 80-100F sunny summer days,
although with some humidity). I'm hoping that the pickling process
(which apparantly involves sodium hydroxide) only softens the seed
case without damaging the seed. Perhaps only the stones from fresh
olives are worth bothering with? Thanks in advance, Ewald Schroder
(ex-pat)

I think they heat-treat the olives for commercial sale. But one of the
British gardening gurus, Geoffrey Smith, says the stones from tinned
peaches will often germinate, so maybe olives will too: they certainly
seem tough enough!


How you gonna get a whole peach in yer martini glass ??


Your martini glasses are too small, methinks.


Ah Ha! I wondered why my martinis had no effect ........ maybe I
should mix them in my 2 gallon watering can, after washing out the
liquid manure .........


well leaving a wee drop in could prove interesting:)




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