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#1
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which trees?
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<pre>Greetings, I just bought another 5 acres in North Florida and I have never really seen any olive trees around here? Is there a certain tree that would do well in the North Florida climate? I would like to have a few trees just for fun and fruit,,, Thanks Lucinda of Glenbrook Glenbrook Farms Herbs and Such http://www.glenbrookfarm.com/herbs Living Healthy!! Living Well!! It doesn't have to cost a fortune </pre> </td></tr></table> |
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#2
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RE: which trees?
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<pre>Lucinda: Stan has expressed his concern for winter chilling and olive flowering (and subsequent fruiting) in Florida. I agree this is likely to be a problem, certainly with common varieties grown in the US - there may be some from low chill areas of the world that would suffice but, of course performance and availability here are unknown. Of equal, maybe more concern is the amount of rainfall and very humid weather you experience in Florida all summer. Leaf diseases, such as olive leaf spot, and insect pests that prefer damp, humid conditions, such as Black Scale, will be prevalent resulting in additional management expense and possible (considerable) production loss. I don't think it will work. Steve Sibbett U.C. Farm Advisor Phone - office 559.733.6486 Mobil 559.280.0666 FAX 559.734.2708 -----Original Message----- From: Stan Kailis [mailto:kailis@ca.com.au] Sent: Monday, August 28, 2000 2:50 PM To: OliveOil@egroups.com Subject: Re: [OliveOil] which trees? Dear Lucinda Regarding olive trees in Florida. I have no doubt the tree will grow. The big question is flowering and fruiting. Generally the olive needs a period of low temperatures to flower and set fruit. A rough guide is - the coldest month should have an average daily temperature of 10-12C. Above this range fruiting can be reduced. If you can send information about your local temperatures, I may be able to give you more definitive information. Stan Kailis ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Five steps to help promote OliveOil: 1- Add a general link to the group on your website: http://www.egroups.com/group/OliveOil 2- Mention the group and its URL in your newsletters and publications. 3- Invite others to visit: http://www.egroups.com/group/OliveOil 4- Add a subscription link on your website. See how here: http://www.egroups.com/promote/OliveOil 5- If you would like me to send a formal invitation to people you know, write to me at OliveOil-owner@egroups.com </pre> </td></tr></table> |
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#3
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Re: which trees?
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<pre>Dear Lucinda Regarding olive trees in Florida. I have no doubt the tree will grow. The big question is flowering and fruiting. Generally the olive needs a period of low temperatures to flower and set fruit. A rough guide is - the coldest month should have an average daily temperature of 10-12C. Above this range fruiting can be reduced. If you can send information about your local temperatures, I may be able to give you more definitive information. Stan Kailis </pre> </td></tr></table> |
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