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<pre>Mike thanks for the reply
Yes we are in South Africa, in the Western Cape
Currently it is winter and I assume this would be thebest time to move the
trees
The challenge will be the quantity, there are 5,000 of them
Regards
Mike
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Wilson [mailto:
mike.wilson@hunterlink.net.au]
Sent: 12 July 2001 08:56
To:
OliveOil@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [OliveOil] Moving olive trees
> Hi,
>
> I have been asked by a farmer that supplies us with oil olives for advice
on
> the following question, can any one comment or pass an opinion
>
> Adjacent to his farm is a farm with several thousand Leccino olive trees
> around 15 years old.
>
> The farmer who owns these trees has died and the son who has inherited
does
> not want to farm olives, he wants to plant wheat
>
> Our farmer wants to know the possibility of transplanting the trees, is it
> possible, how should it be done and when.
>
> He thinks that he should cut all the trees of at the base to do it, I
don't
> think this is necessary.
>
> Please help, unfortunately buying the ground with the trees is not an
option
>
> Regards
>
> Mike Meredith
>
> Riebeeck Olive Boutique
Mike,
For the recent Sydney Olympic Games a fair number of mature trees were grown
in the Hunter and sold to SOCOG by local grower Tony Nicolas. He
successfully transplanted them to Olympic Park, so should be able to advise.
Tony isn't on the net, but his contact phone number is +612 4982 8137. Am I
right to assume you are in South Africa?
I will be seeing Tony on Saturday, so I'll mention your e-mail to him then.
Regards,
Mike Wilson.
Hunter Valley.
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</pre>
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