May Lotito wrote:Your tree is quite big to me. I'd like to have a sweet olive tree but it won't survive the winter in zone 6b. The flowers are edible and commonly used in oriental tea and pastry.
Jordan Holland wrote:
Drew Leather wrote:
I'm right at the bottom of what is considered the 7b zone. We've had so much nonstop rain and then that sudden 6° temperature that I was surprised it held on when it did, then suddenly, a week later, it just dropped all the leaves in one day.
I noticed the same thing. Most plants die or lose their leaves pretty much right when it gets too cold, especially after a freeze, but I just noticed these turning brown a couple days ago.
Jordan Holland wrote:
Drew Leather wrote:
This one in my yard is about 15 feet tall and the diameter around the lower limbs is about 10 to 12 feet. Is that typical?
I wouldn't know. I've never seen anyone else where I live have any. At the current rate, it would take many years for mine to reach that size for sure. It is referred to as a tree, so I presume that wouldn't be outrageous.
Jordan Holland wrote:I have two of them. I believe it is Sweet Olive, (Osmanthus Fragrans) and it is aptly names. When I saw them for sale, one had two or three tiny (about 1\8 inch) flowers in bloom, and the amount of heavenly scent they put out made me buy them.
They have been rather slow-growing for me, but stay green down to surprisingly low temperatures here in 7b. This year's extreme cold has them turning brown now. I certainly hope they are ok.
greg mosser wrote:where are you located?