Monday, September 29, 2008

Sweet Tea Olive


Fall is a great time to visit the Birmingham Botanical Gardens for many reasons but the fragrance coming from sweet tea olives is highest on my list. Tea olives are in the plant Genus Osmanthus which comes from the Greek and means “fragrant (osma) flower (anthus)” and it certainly lives up to the name. Tea olive, as the name indicates, belongs to the Olive Family (Oleaceae) along with numerous jasmines which are also very fragrant. The usually white blooms are small and not extremely showy and I am not surprised you could not tell where the fragrance originated. Even though individual blooms are small some cultivars have clusters large enough to add some floral interest. Tea olives are very nice evergreen shrubs with holly like foliage. You can easily tell the two apart even when not in bloom by looking at the leaf arrangement. Hollies have leaves arranged alternately down the stem and tea olives have an opposite arrangement.

There is a large planting of Osmanthus x fortunei 'Fruitlandii' at the BBG that makes a wonderful screen planting that is a pleasure to walk near. The mature height of tea olives may vary from six to thirty feet depending on the species and cultivar. I lived in Mobile in the past where the “fragrant tea olive” Osmanthus fragrans was the most commonly planted species. It is less cold tolerant but will survive in central (possibly north) Alabama in a protected micro-climate. It would be best to locate this plant on the south or southwest side of a structure. Much like camellias the main risk from cold is the rapid freezing and thawing action that is worse with a morning sun exposure. As the name seems to indicate it is the most fragrant of all the tea olives and therefore may be worth the risk of occasional cold damage. It also has the longest bloom period with blooms possible in every month with the letter “R” included.

In general all the tea olives will grow in full sun to part shade but in the central southeastern United States I would suggest a site with a break from the afternoon sun. Once established they are fairly drought tolerant but it may take a couple years to become established. Fall is a great time to plant and will require less care than spring or summer plantings. Choose a well drained area with slightly acidic soil for best results.

Tea olives are really quite easy to care for once established and have very few pest problems. If pest problems do occur it is probably due to stress from poor soil conditions or drought. Scale insects may flare up from time to time but can be controlled with horticultural oil sprays. Minimal pruning is needed unless they get too large. If you do prune them do so in the late winter to avoid removing the flower buds which form on the new growth each spring and summer. The exception to this rule would be the Delavay tea olive (Osmanthus delavayi) and our native Devilwood (Osmanthus americanus) which bloom in the spring and should be pruned just after blooming like other spring blooming plants.

Devilwood is the only native tea olive and is native to swamps and stream banks in the southern US including south Alabama. The name comes from the extremely hard wood which is a “devil” to split and work. The leaves are larger and less holly like than other tea olives. Like other tea olives the flowers are quite fragrant but they occur in early spring on last year’s growth. This native plant is more tolerant of wet soil conditions but is adaptable to most Alabama soils. It would be a great choice for a rain garden because it tolerates frequent flooding and can take the drier times between rain events.

Regardless of which tea olive you plant you are sure to be enchanted by the sweet aroma they produce and yes they can be used in tea.

2 comments:

Timothy said...

I am looking for 20 species to include in a Rain Garden poster for Southeastern US.

Glad to run into this blog posting on Sweet Tea Olive.

Good Nature Publishing just designed a new Rain Garden poster for conservation districts, extensions and storm water agencies across Oregon and Washington.

It turned out great as you can see from the website. If you have recommendations on plants for SE, let me know.

Best fishes,

Timothy Colman
800 631 3086
Good Nature Publishing
Seattle WA

Cam said...

You can also dry the flowers out and use them in several different types of desserts. It's very common in Cantonese cooking to use "kwei fa" like that, and my wife, who is from Hong Kong loves it.

Here's a recipe:

http://wendyinkk.blogspot.ca/2010/04/osmanthus-cake.html