Expats in Croatia – Olive garden

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Post author SJ

Written by our local expert SJ

Sarah-Jane has lived in Croatia for 10+ years. SJ, as she is known, has been traveling the Balkans & beyond since 2000. She now shares her passion for traveling with her husband & kids.

Did we tell you that we are growing olives?

Growing olive trees is (mostly) low maintenance. Yet it takes around 5 years to get enough olives (masline) on your trees to produce enough olive oil to last you the year. So that is why back in 2010, we decided to plant olives in Croatia, on land we inherited as an investment for future olive oil (maslinovo ulje) production and, more importantly, consumption.

expat olive gardens
Little buds of goodness

We now have almost 50 trees and plan to plant another 20 trees in the near future. We have planted a Croatian olive variety called the Orkula, also known as Oblica, depending on where you are from. These olive trees produce large olives, which makes them easy to pick when harvesting.

Unfortunately for us, we have another 2 years to wait before we start getting enough olives to make oil. Until then, I hope you enjoy the wander through our olive garden in these photos.

You can also read our expat adventures in winemaking and or why not take a look at one of the tasty Croatian recipes we’ve shared.

expat olive gardening
Garden number 1
expat olives
Garden number 2
expat olive tree
The branch needed just a little support to keep it from snapping, until it matures.
expat olive
The future olive oil that will be in my kitchen
expat in the olive gardening
These fell off the tree early. No good for olive oil, but still good in the oven as a snack.
expat olive garden
Getting bigger and bushier by the day
expat in the olive garden
My boys playing in the dirt – country life is fun!
expat olives
1, 2, 3, 4, 5…..

Have you ever grown olives? Any tricks you’d care to share?

Comments (31)

  1. They look lovely! It will be great to be able to make your own olive oil – I don’t know if I would have the patience to wait for them to mature, though! I have a hard enough time waiting for my tomatoes to get ripe.

  2. This post made my mouth water – and that ad for filigree jewelry gets me every time I come here!

    1. Only 2 more years to wait! Aisha I have a pair of the earrings – I’ll put up a post this week. They are so divine, and even better looking in real life.

  3. Hi SJ,
    seems you put more effort into your pages than I.
    Anyway,only one can be the winner :-), and being very (!!!!) busy on our land, I simply have to choose.
    About them olives I have a question:
    I know you can produce your own olive oil, the very best, but what about preserving them as olives, in let’s say salt or oil ?
    Did you of could you let us readers know how to do so ?
    Thanks, poz, pim.

    1. I am a night owl, and with a sleeping baby you can do much at 2am :)
      As for the olives, I was asking about that this week, BUT I need Mr. CtD home to translate as I can’t be sure of what is being said. I did see a big pile in the fridge which looked new. Stay tuned.

  4. we’ve got a few olive trees growing (well they were OVER growing) in our garden. Now with the help of some local friends, we’ve pruned them back, and they get more “energy” from the soil so produce bigger and better olives. But as we are never in Croatia during olive-picking times, our friends go round collecting olives from our garden (and gardens of other expats who are also not there) so they can make their own olive oil. How good is that!!. I think the very tiring and time-consuming bit is picking the olives, and it has to be done quickly when they are ripe, so be ready for a lot of work in a few years with your 50-70 trees, SJ (or get a lot of help from family /friends when is olive-picking season….)

    1. That is good that they benefit. Especially as they’d leave behind a bunch of mess on the ground if they did not.
      Our community all help each other, so yup we’ll have lot of hands at the ready to help – as we did with them this year. It has to be one of the best things about living so close to family. So many hands to help when you need.

  5. Oh my I am beyond envious! It all looks so beautiful and being in such glorious surroundings must make tending for them all a bit easier. Are they hard work to manage?

    I am off to daydream about making my own olive oil now! Thanks ever so much for joining in and sharing – I really look forward to seeing your olive oil being made!

  6. so happy i found this blog! i live in the US and have a dream to move to Croatia one day, feels unattainable at the moment but reading some of your posts make the dream feel more real–thanks for the added inspiration:)

    1. You are so welcome Vani. It is hard, I won’t lie. BUT it is attainable and worst case you can always go back and say you gave a a shot! Keep in touch.

  7. Hi…
    my name is Lilian from Nigeria. i want to start Olive farming in Nigeria, but don’t know much about olive farming.
    please can you tell me what to do or where i can source for information that will guide me.
    The spacing of your olive farming is nice. hope your 50 trees of olive tree is doing well.

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