Thinking last night I now consider if I may be wrong and the guy that wrote this article is actually correct and a coarse layer may result in the pot holding more water. It seems that a pot of the same diameter but shorter will in effect hold more water in the medium but I am still unsure?
We know that the size of the pot we use can be very important as if the pot is too large then it takes too long for the tree to use the stored water up. I had given this some thought and considered that surely in a larger pot when growing out you could compensate by using a much coarser mix.
Also with the modern substrates that are available to us I believe it is possible to create a mix that is at the optimum water air ratio straight after watering so in theory we could use an over sized pot and just water by a schedule to refresh the water and gas held in the mix(so it does not go stale) with no concern that the water ratio is too high!
I guess many have heard the theory that a coarse mix results in coarse growth and fine mix the opposite. Is this true? Also as a finer grade medium equates to a larger surface area for the roots so using a larger pot with a coarser mix in theory may end up giving the same surface are in the medium for the roots to grow on as using a smaller pot with a finer grade medium. So maybe it is just good practice to get the grade right and use the appropriate size pot?
I read that Olive prefer a finer grade soil so again species could be another variable. Now my head is starting to hurt

All this is why I suggested to Jamie that we can't really conclude anything from what we understand so far! Although I liked his thinking

Like I said I have an olive (bubble leaf) and although it looks healthy it has grown very little. The medium was annoyingly slow to dry out and would then dry suddenly. I took it out of the pot and found there had been little growth of the roots and the resulting water on the bottom of the pot was not desirable.
I am very unsure as to the characteristics of this species(any other tree would have filled the pot with roots in no time) and would normally of put it is a smaller pot so there was less chance of it sitting in water with little root growth. But after reading this article I figured I could manipulate the water table essentially giving my self a much smaller water holding area while still allowing the tree lots of room for root growth to grow out.
I can't say the tree has excelled in growth since which is not surprising at this time of the year but I am now much happier in the predictable way the soil drys and there is still plenty of room for roots if it takes off, so I will have to wait and see what happens when it warms up again.
I try to aviod bring Walter up too much but a Master that puts himself out ther as much as he does is very educational

Hi Paul. I am some what confused by the terms you use and am not sure you understand what I suggest. I will start a new thread to discuss it as it is pretty far off topic
