My FAT A$$ MAMA!

AppleBonsai

Shohin
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Here is an olive I have had for awhile...Been working on the branching for a couple years. I love this variety because it has both the gnarly trunk AND very small leaves! Let me know what you think. My first post, so don't make me want to run away and "...remove my profile from this site"! :eek:
 

Giga

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Some good carving on the fat part and maybe a deeper planting, I think, would give age and and more pleasing composition? Very nice tee! I've always liked olive but I think it get too coldhere
 

AppleBonsai

Shohin
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Oh shit Giga, Carving?! I would have to send it out for that! lol I had to plant it this high to fit in the pot for now...Chopped the crap out of it's roots to fit her fat A$$ into this pot.
 

AppleBonsai

Shohin
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Yeah, I just don't see where I would make any cuts to it to improve it any bit.
 

JudyB

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Yes, I overwinter my olive inside, they are easy to keep inside until the weather warms up. You can cut those roots back much harder, if you lower it in the pot like Giga suggests, the image will be enormously improved. And it looks like you could have a lot of branches starting up in many places on that trunk.
 

jk_lewis

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The area inside the box is pretty ugly and makes the trunk above it look like obese flabs of flesh. I'd suggest planting to the upper line or, if it is true you can saw it off and regrow roots, do that.
 

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Giga

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Yes, I overwinter my olive inside, they are easy to keep inside until the weather warms up. You can cut those roots back much harder, if you lower it in the pot like Giga suggests, the image will be enormously improved. And it looks like you could have a lot of branches starting up in many places on that trunk.

So over winter they do ok indoors? Well maybe I'll keep my eye out now. Haven't done much research on them, just admired
 

JudyB

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So over winter they do ok indoors?
Had mine for at least 4 winters now, it doesn't get anything fancy, just a spot in a south facing window and a normal shop light type florescent fixture overhead. Mine puts on a lot of growth even in the winter.
 
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