top of page

Mysite Group

Public·56 members
Daniel Rogers
Daniel Rogers

Buy Sweet Olive Tree WORK


  • With proper care, tea olive plants can live between 25 and 50 years."}},"@type": "Question","name": "Can tea olive plants grow indoors?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "While tea olive plants can be brought indoors for a brief season or cold weather, they thrive outdoors and will not usually bloom if grown indoors.","@type": "Question","name": "What are alternatives to tea olive?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "In place of tea olive, try other flowering shrubs like spirea, doublefile viburnum, or mock orange."]}]}] .icon-garden-review-1fill:#b1dede.icon-garden-review-2fill:none;stroke:#01727a;stroke-linecap:round;stroke-linejoin:round > buttonbuttonThe Spruce The Spruce's Instagram The Spruce's TikTok The Spruce's Pinterest The Spruce's Facebook NewslettersClose search formOpen search formSearch DecorRoom Design

  • Decorating

  • Design Styles

  • Small Spaces

  • Feng Shui

  • See all

  • GardenPlants A to Z

  • Houseplants

  • Landscaping

  • Pests & Problems

  • Wild Birds

  • In the Weeds With Plant People

  • The Spruce Gardening Review Board

  • See all

  • Home ImprovementSkills & Specialties

  • Painting

  • Kitchen

  • Bathroom

  • Interior Remodel

  • Exteriors

  • Outdoor Building

  • Home Services

  • Green Improvements

  • The Spruce Home Improvement Review Board

  • See all

  • CleaningCleaning

  • Organizing

  • Laundry

  • Pest Control

  • The Spruce Cleaning Review Board

  • See all

  • CelebrationsEvents & Parties

  • Etiquette & Advice

  • Birthdays

  • Graduations

  • See all

  • What to BuyHow We Test Products

  • Bedding

  • Furniture

  • Vacuums

  • Best Gifts

  • Cleaning Products

  • See all

  • NewsHome Trends

  • Brands & Collections

  • Sales & Deals

  • House Tours

  • Perspectives

  • "One Thing" Video Series

  • In the Weeds With Plant People

  • See all

  • About UsEditorial Policy

  • Product Testing

  • Diversity & Inclusion

  • Gardening Review Board

  • Home Improvement Review Board

  • Cleaning Review Board

  • See all

Learn tips for creating your most beautiful home and garden ever.Subscribe The Spruce's Instagram The Spruce's TikTok The Spruce's Pinterest The Spruce's Facebook About UsNewsletterPress and MediaContact UsEditorial GuidelinesGardeningPlants & FlowersShrubsHow to Grow and Care for Tea Olive ShrubsByPeg AloiUpdated on 07/11/22Reviewed byAndrew Hughes Reviewed byAndrew Hughes Instagram Website Andrew Hughes is a certified arborist and member of the International Society of Arborists specializing in tree heal care. He founded and runs Urban Loggers, LLC, a company offering residential tree services in the Midwest and Connecticut.Learn more about The Spruce'sReview Board The Spruce / Krystal Slagle




buy sweet olive tree



Sweet olive (Osmanthus fragrans) is a large upright shrub native to many parts of Asia and belonging to the Olive family (Oleaceae). This plant can reach up to 20 feet tall with a 6-8 feet wide span, but is usually seen in our landscapes at around six feet high. Its opposite leave arrangement are a dark, shiny green and the edges may be finely toothed or smooth with both types present on the same individual. As the plant matures, most of the foliage is held at the outermost ends of the stems, but the plant retains a handsome appearance despite their leggy ness. In autumn, winter and early spring white flowers cover the shrub. It blooms intermittently throughout the summer. Individually the blossoms are small and inconspicuous, but the fragrance is powerful and exquisite. Sweet olive is rather slow growing and is usually quite long lived.


Culture:Sweet olive prefers reasonably good soil, but is adaptable except in the poorest, sandy soil. May be pruned to maintain size and encourage branching, but thrives equally well with neglect. Sweet olives are sometimes attacked by scale insects, usually only when growing conditions are poor.


Usage:Plant sweet olives where their lovely fragrance can be enjoyed! Situate a sweet olive wherever there is foot traffic near windows or doors and in outdoor sitting areas. Incorporate sweet olive into foundation plantings at the corners or use as an accent between windows. A row of sweet olive makes a very attractive hedge or screen. In areas where it is tender, grow sweet olive as a container specimen so it can be protected indoors in winter.


Features:Sweet olive has deliciously fragrant flowers that smell a lot like those of a fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus), which is in the same family. Sweet olive is a traditional element in the southern garden landscape and a whiff of its apricot-scented blossom carried on a cool winter breeze makes a memorable impression.


The Fragrant Tea Olive Tree, or Osmanthus Fragrans, is an amazing flowering tree and an excellent choice to sweeten up your garden with its incredibly delectable scent and soft white blossoms! The sweet olive tree may even attract butterflies with the sweet scent.


The lush, green foliage of the Tea Olive shrub has pale undersides and is accompanied by a multitude of small, extremely sweet-smelling white flowers. The tiny creamy white tea olive tree blooms will perfume the entire landscape.


Since the fragrant olive tree flowers are not noticeably showy, visitors in your garden or landscape will wonder where the delightful fragrance is coming from. They will get their answer as soon as they pass this dense evergreen shrub with dark green leaves that keep its color all year long.


With its upright, vase-shaped growth habit, the sweet osmanthus tea olive bush is ideal for use as a fragrant specimen plant, or privacy hedge, or can be trained to grow as a small tree. The sweet Olive shrub should be placed where its delightful fragrance can be enjoyed. We enjoy seeing it as a border hedge in multiple foundation plantings. It makes a perfect ornamental tree.


Tea olive trees are evergreen and usually keep their luscious green leaves all year. If your sweet olive tree is losing leaves it's likely due to a watering issue. Be sure to water your fragrant tea olive tree every day to help keep it healthy. Other reasons tea olive trees lose their leaves include root rot, fungal root infection, extremely cold temperatures, or if it's not getting enough sunlight.


Tea olive trees will grow at a moderate rate of 1 to 2 feet per year until they reach their full maturity. If you buy a tea olive tree from Perfect Plants, it will usually take your tree at least 3 to 5 years to reach full maturity.


Good news! Tea olive trees are not toxic or poisonous to dogs or any other animal. This can be confused with tea tree oil, which needs to be created and processed and is highly toxic to dogs and cats.


Fragrant tea olive tree blooms begin in early fall around October and usually last until early spring. Sweet tea olive trees can bloom several times a year and bloom for a long period at a time, sometimes as long as two months, letting you enjoy the fragrance and beauty of the olive tree flowers all year round.


Planting a fragrant tea olive tree in your garden is easy. Be sure to choose a planting spot in full sun if possible, although partial shade is okay too. Tea olive trees also prefer acidic soil that is rich in nutrients and well-draining to prevent root rot.


Finally, water in the tea olive tree to help the soil and set and the roots establish themselves. Water the fragrant olive tree regularly the first year of planting to establish a strong root system and keep healthy white blooms. You can also apply a complete fertilizer with slow-release nitrogen yearly.


The best time to prune tea olive trees is in the late winter when the tree is dormant, although you can perform light pruning throughout the year, like removing broken, dead or diseased foliage or branches.


The Tea Olive should be pruned selectively, removing growing tips to maintain a bushy, compact size. They should not be sheared or severely pruned. Lower lateral branches can be removed to create a small, multi-trunked tree.


To prune fragrant tea olive trees, trim back the tips of the branches, leaving about a inch about the next set of leaves or junction. You can also trim any new growth in the summer if you want to prevent the tea olive shrub from getting bigger.


Sweet olive trees (osmanthus fragrans) grow as evergreen shrubs or trees, with sweet-smelling blooms in the winter and spring months. They have a round shape, wide spread and are typically 10 to 12 feet high, but may reach heights of up to 25 feet.


California covers a wide range of growing zones, so check to make sure you are in U.S. Department of Agriculture plant hardiness zones 8 to 10 before you decide to plant this fragrant beauty in your outdoor garden. Coastal northern California zones range from zone 9a to 10a; farther from the coast, the zones can go as low as 5b at high elevations. If you are in a lower zone, research related olive species that can be planted in climates as low as zone 6.


Because the spread of a sweet olive tree can reach as wide as 20 feet, it is wise not to plant them close together. If you plant more than one, place them in different areas of your garden, at least several feet apart.


Sweet olive trees require very little pruning to thrive and keep their shape. If your tree becomes so thick with growth that it starts to look sloppy, simply prune out some of the density after the blooms fade. Do not prune during the fall, when risk for infection is higher. Always use clean, sharp pruning shears or clippers.


The sweet olive tree prefers moist, well drained soil. Water it regularly so that the soil feels slightly damp, but do not water so much that the roots are standing in water. Overwatering can cause problems with root rot, even in this extremely hardy and resilient species. 041b061a72


About

Welcome to the group! You can connect with other members, ge...

Members

bottom of page