Any idea what this is? Olive variety?
Have I stuffed it by the look of the roots?
I thought I could chop the trunk just about the fork and see how it goes planted on an angle

Thoughts?!
I dug some 3 or 4 weeks ago and most are already shooting new buds
Very well said - i am not that fussed that this is not the 'perfect' trunk etc etc, i will cut it down and hopefully can get it to sprout a bit and turn it into something small and OK looking after a few years.shibui wrote: ↑February 26th, 2020, 10:06 am I think it is good to get some practice with less valuable weeds before tackling really good ones.
having a go at trees like this gives people some ideas of what can be done and what is needed to collect.
When it sprouts madly that will also build confidence that transplanting trees is not really so difficult after all![]()
Agree. Could it be a grafted tree where the scion is overgrowing the stock?Jake fowler wrote: ↑February 25th, 2020, 9:06 pm The upper leaves look like olive but the base of the trunk is very thin compared to olives much smaller that i have collected. The leaves are quite large so possibly a different olive variant? If it is olive no harm in cutting the tap root off. I sometimes cut all roots off if they are deep. All the best with it
That's possible but it is far more common for olives to grow these large, swollen bases just above the roots. I guess it is a mechanism for storing food and energy so they can survive tough summers or bad years in their natural habitat which tends to be pretty dry and rocky.Could it be a grafted tree where the scion is overgrowing the stock?