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Oregon Olives |
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Oregon Olive Oil |
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Oregon Olive Trees |
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Trees for Sale |
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Introduction |
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Planting |
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Growing |
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Cultivars |
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Think global - buy local. |
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Oregon Olive Trees™ |
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Oregon Olives |
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Olive Tree Sales Closed for the Month of May
As a nurseryman and small scale farmer, I have a motto: "Sell, repot or plant annually". Since April was dedicated to sales to others, it is now time to move on to repotting and planting in our own groves! To give ourselves time to focus and "Git 'er done", we are closed for sales the entire month of May. While I will still strive to answer all email questions during this time, my responses probably will not be particularly timely.
So, until June, happy growing! |

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Recommended Cultivars For North-West Oregon
Here is my current (Fall 2011) assessment of the olives trees in our groves: these cultivars are the top cultivars from a horticultural perspective. Listed in very rough order of adaptation to our climate (name, origin, traditional use, traditional pollinator, etc.):
* Frantoio, Italy, oil, self-compatible(?) * Picholine, France, green ripe, oil, self-compatible(?) Carolea, Italy, green and black ripe, oil (pollinators: Itrana, Picholene) * Picual, Spain, oil, black ripe, self-compatible(?) * Amfissa, Greece, green and black ripe, oil * Taggiasca, Italy, oil, self-compatible(?) * Tanche, France, black ripe, oil (pollinator: Cayon) * Coratina, Italy, oil, green table * Bosana, Italy (Sardinia), oil, self-compatible(?) * Grignan, Italy, oil, (pollinator: Casaliva) Chetoui, Tunisia, oil, black ripe, self-compatible(?) Verdale, France, oil, green ripe, self-compatible(?)
These cultivars are also doing well; but either seem to be just a tad more sensitive to our growing conditions, or we just don't have a lot of trees on which to base a more solid recommendation:
* Kalamata, Greece, black ripe (Kalamata style), oil, self-compatible(?) excellent specimen tree * Ascolano, Italy, green ripe (pollinators: Itrana, Santa Caterina) Maurino, Italy, oil * Cailletier, France, oil, half ripe * Empeltre, Spain, oil, black ripe, self-compatible(?) Nocellara de Etnea, Italy (Sicily), green ripe, oil Hoji Blanca, Spain, oil, green ripe, self-compatible(?) * Moraiolo, Italy, oil, (pollinators: Pendolino, Marino)
* Cultivars we at Oregon Olive Trees expect to have available for sale in 2012
And these cultivars are under evaluation as to their suitability in the northern Willamette valley:
Agezy Shami, Egypt, green ripe Aglandau, France, oil, green ripe, self-compatible(?) Azapa, Chile, green or black ripe Barnea (K18), Israel, oil Barouni, Tunisia, green ripe, self-compatible(?) Canino, Italy, oil, (pollinators: Frantoio, Leccino, Moraiolo, Marino) Carboncella, Italy, oil, (pollinators: Pendolino, Marino) Casaliva, Italy, oil, (pollinator: Grignan) Lechin di Sevilla, Spain, oil, self-compatible(?) Manzanillo, Spain, green ripe, self-compatible(?) Mission, Spain, green ripe, oil, self-compatible(?) Mission Leiva, Columbia Oueslati, Tunisia, oil, table olives Salonenque, France, oil, green ripe, oil Saiali Magloub, Tunisia, table olives Salome, Australia, oil Santa Caterina, Italy, green ripe Sevillano, Spain, green ripe
self-compatible: a given olive tree can pollinate itself.
These are very new to us, and we basically don't have enough data yet to draw any conclusions:
Bidh El Hammam Cordovil Dolce Del Marocco Giaraffa Grossane Hamid Karydolia Nab Tamri Prunara Rubra Syrogylolia Touffahi Vassilika
And, the sad list: those which we do not think are particularly suitable for our climate:
The ratings will undoubtedly change as time goes by, and we are still collecting new cultivars; but until next fall, this is how we see it! |
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Some data on olive fruit size in the Pacific North West
Farms are factories: taking in nutrients, water, sunlight and our time and energy; in return giving us food to eat. Here in the PNW, as compared to places olives are traditionally grown, we have a relatively short growing season and a relative lack of sunlight. Olive trees do respond to their environment, and can adapt somewhat to the lack of these inputs. However, the 2011 growing season made it clear that in a "poor" growing year the size of the olives will be below expectations. How much so and to what effect? The answer, as almost all answers in farming are: "It varies". Particularly, the size of the crop negatively impacts the size of the individual olive. Some of our small potted trees, of particularly precocious cultivars with a natural tendency to have small olives (think SHD clones like Koroneiki) had hundreds of very tiny olives. Here is a picture of all of the olive cultivars we had fruit on in 2011, to give you an idea on size in a "low accumulated heat" year: |
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From top to bottom, and left to right:
US Quarter US Dime Aggezi Shami Aglandau Amfissa Arbequina Arbosana Ascolano Azapa Barouni Bosana Bouteillan Cailletier Canino Carolea Casaliva Chetoui Coratina Empeltre Frantoio Grignan Hoji Blanca Itrana Kalamata Koroneiki Leccino Lucca Manzanillo Maurino Mission Mission Leiva Moraiolo Nocellara del Belice Nocellara de Etnea Pendolino Picholene Picual Saiali Magloue Salome Salonenque Santa Caterina Sevillano US Quarter US Dime
Size does matter for table olives, probably more so for Americans than Europeans; probably the biggest complaints I have from people trying smaller ones is their small size and that they are "big pit, little meat" olives.
Picture taken Nov 10, 2011. |
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Fall tours 2011
The fall rains have started, and the 2011 tour season and tree sales are over for us. The tours all went excellent, and everybody really appreciated them, but there were several unintended consequences. After every one saw how well even small trees planted from AB46 pots can grow, and how #2 trees have really good survivability, we didn't sell any #5 trees.
Two Leccino, one planted in spring 2010 out of an AB46 pot, the other planted spring 2011 out of a #5 pot. Which do you think is which (09/19/11): |
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(The one on the left was planted out of an AB46 pot)
And the other thing I noticed: we didn't sell a single Arbequina tree. After seeing the size of, say, Amfissa, Picholene, Nocellara del Belice, Santa Caterina, Ascolano, Sevillano and other olives, I guess nobody wanted Arbequina.
Three Nocellara del Belice, and one Arbequina olive (the small one, but it is -not- a shotberry!) 09/19/11 |


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And that brings up something interesting I learned. People who have only Arbequina are experiencing severe shotberry problems, to the extent that they have essentially only shotberries. I guess I will be rethinking and re-writing what I have to say on pollination!
Speaking of Nocellara del Belice, here is a blog post from last year's harvest in Sicily:
Doesn't it just make you want to go out and start picking olives and curing them?! |