A trip to the land of endangered ancient olive trees

A trip to the land of endangered ancient olive trees

January 06, 2017
A woman looks at the millennia old olive tree, famous for “staring” in the film “the Olive” by Spanish director Iciar Bollain, in an olive grove in the municipality of Uldecona. — AFP
A woman looks at the millennia old olive tree, famous for “staring” in the film “the Olive” by Spanish director Iciar Bollain, in an olive grove in the municipality of Uldecona. — AFP





THE sun sets in eastern Spain and dozens of ancient olive trees cast long shadows on the ground.

Once dug up and sold as luxury items for the wealthy, they are increasingly protected as farmers and authorities realize these trees, some of which were planted by the Romans, are an invaluable part of Spain’s heritage.

Near the town of Traiguera, Amador Peset, 37, gets out of his old 4x4 and, in the biting wind, cuts across a field before stopping before a majestic tree.

“You’re probably in front of the biggest olive tree in the world... with a girth of 10.2 meters (33.5 feet),” the farmer says proudly.

Botanists say a circumference of 10 meters indicates a tree is over a thousand years old — which means this specimen was around when the area was still under Muslim rule.

Peset lovingly tends 106 such “monuments”, cleaning their gnarled branches and ridding them of weeds that suck their sap like vampires.

Joan Porta, another farmer, says that just a few years back, olive trees were largely ignored in fields also full of almond and other fruit trees, vines or wheat.

In fact, they were often used for firewood in farms.

“Now we realize that they are thousand-year-old trees,” the 75-year-old says, pointing to the jewel in his own field’s crown.

It is aged 1,702 years according to a dating method used by the Polytechnic University of Madrid -- which means it was planted under the Roman emperor Constantine.

Brought to Spain by the Greeks and the Romans, olive trees now cover 2.5 million hectares (6.2 million acres) of land.

Such is the attraction of these long-living trees that they have become a must-have luxury item for some wealthy people.

In the mid 2000s, “people would talk uneasily about how some trees were torn out, how they would see trucks loaded up” with large trunks, says Maria Teresa Adell.

Adell manages an association of 27 towns and cities in the Valencia region — including Traiguera — as well as the neighboring areas of Catalonia and Aragon, which, among other things, works toward protecting their olive tree heritage.

According to the group, hundreds of the ancient trees were ripped out during the 2000s and taken away to be sold for high prices in garden centers or specialized auctions.

Online foreign garden centers still offer “ancient” olive trees for sale, such as Todd’s Botanics in Britain, where one specimen from Valencia is priced at 3,500 pounds ($4,300, 4,100 euros).

“I buy one or two every year,” says owner Mark Macdonald, adding however that he only purchases trees already in ready-to-plant clods.

As for those who buy them, they tend to have money — people such as French magnate Bernard Magrez, who told AFP he had planted olive trees in the grounds of several of his Bordeaux estates including the prestigious Chateau Pape Clement, aged “between 1,015 and 1,860 years”.

For Cesar-Javier Palacios, spokesman for the Felix Rodriguez de la Fuente environmental foundation, taking them away from their native soil “is like taking a cathedral and putting it somewhere else.”

Not so, argues Roamhy Machoir-Heras, who organized a big ancient olive tree auction in 2011 where Magrez bought his specimens.

Hers were already in clods, and “we saved them,” she said.

Of 44 specimens, some were sold for more than 60,000 euros.

Those that didn’t go to Magrez’s estates went to a “sumptuous collection” in the Middle East, she added. — AFP


January 06, 2017
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