Our Trees
Our collection is curated specifically for bulk buyers who demand consistency, performance, and scale. Whether you are sourcing productive fruiting olive trees for orchard developments, clean and architectural fruitless olive trees for commercial landscapes, or statement making palm specimens for high impact installations, each variety in our portfolio is selected with professional project requirements in mind.
Our collection is curated specifically for bulk buyers who demand consistency, performance, and scale. Whether you are sourcing productive fruiting olive trees for orchard developments, clean and architectural fruitless olive trees for commercial landscapes, or statement making palm specimens for high impact installations, each variety in our portfolio is selected with professional project requirements in mind. We prioritize tree uniformity, strong root systems, reliable growth timelines, disease resilience, and high transplant success so your installations perform as beautifully as they look. From Mediterranean heritage cultivars to climate adapted ornamentals and iconic palms, our inventory is built to support developers, municipalities, landscape architects, and large scale estate projects with dependable supply and predictable results.
Fruiting Olive Trees
Production-Driven. Heritage-Rich. Built to Perform.
When you’re sourcing fruiting olive trees in volume, you’re not just buying trees — you’re investing in long-term yield, structure, and legacy.
Our fruiting cultivars are selected for:
Uniform canopy structure for clean, consistent installations
Strong root systems to ensure high transplant success rates
Proven varietals with reliable growth timelines and yield potential
Mediterranean genetics trusted for centuries in oil and table production
Whether your project calls for productive orchard blocks, agritourism developments, estate groves, or mixed-use landscapes that embrace fruit-bearing character, we supply scalable inventory without compromising on quality.
Bulk availability. Graded consistency. Predictable performance.
Fruitless Olive Trees
Fruitless Olive Trees
Mediterranean Elegance — Without the Mess.
For high-traffic commercial landscapes, luxury communities, and municipal streetscapes, fruitless olive trees deliver timeless beauty without maintenance headaches.
Our ornamental selections offer:
Clean, low-fruit performance ideal for patios, parking lots, and hardscapes
Balanced, symmetrical canopies for cohesive design
High transplant success for large-scale installs
Drought-tolerant resilience once established
These are the go-to trees for developers who want the classic olive silhouette — silver-green foliage, sculptural trunks, soft movement — without fruit drop concerns.
Reliable supply. Refined aesthetic. Built for scale.
Specimen Palm Trees
When your project demands presence, specimen palms define the space from day one.
Our bulk palm offerings are selected for:
Architectural height and symmetry
Root integrity for safe relocation and planting
Fast visual establishment
High survival rates in large-scale installations
Ideal for resort entries, luxury developments, civic centers, and estate driveways, specimen palms create vertical drama and unmistakable curb appeal.
If olives anchor the landscape, palms elevate it.
Call Now
(619) 384-4305
All Options
Fruiting Olives Trees Field Grown and Containers
Fruitless Olive Trees Field Grown and Containers
Specimen Palm Trees Field Grown and Containers
Frantoio | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Typically upright/strong framework; specify caliper + canopy training for consistent form.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate–vigorous once established; plan 1–2 seasons for “landscape look.”
- Yield Potential: Moderate–high yield potential (can create fruit drop issues in hardscape zones).
Leccino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Consistent upright canopy; good for uniform allees if trained early.
- Growth Timeline: Reliable medium vigor; shapes nicely with structural pruning.
- Yield Potential: Fruit set improves with cross-pollination; otherwise can be light/variable.
Maurino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Often shows graceful habit; specify staking/training for consistent structure.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; develops canopy quicker with early tip-pruning.
- Yield Potential: Often described as abundant/small fruit—more mess risk if placed near paving.
Pendolino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Also known as the universal pollinator.
- Tree Uniformity: Naturally weeping/pendulous form—uniformity depends on consistent training height.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; canopy “fills in” well when structurally pruned.
- Yield Potential: Notable fruiting when pollinated—locate away from patios/parking.
Coratina | Puglia, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Tends to be robust; keep uniform via identical pruning schedule across lots.
- Growth Timeline: Often vigorous; can reach “screening” effect faster than slower cultivars.
- Yield Potential: High oil/production reputation—expect fruit drop unless managed/harvested.
Taggiasca | Liguria, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Often smaller-scale canopy; uniformity is easy if you standardize trunk height.
- Growth Timeline: Generally moderate; good for tighter landscape footprints.
- Yield Potential: Typically fruiting cultivar—place away from pools/pavers.
Ascolana | Marche, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Good for consistent “traditional CA olive” look when trained to a single leader.
- Growth Timeline: Solid canopy development; plan for formative pruning years 1–3.
- Yield Potential: High table-fruit potential = high mess potential near hardscape.
Nocellara del Belice (Castelvetrano) | Sicily, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Dense crown is commonly described—can be very consistent in rows.
- Growth Timeline: Often described as establishing into a small shade tree with a dense canopy.
- Yield Potential: Fruits in ~several years; expect fruit drop unless harvested/managed.
Bella di Cerignola | Apulia, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Typically selected for very large fruit—spec uniform grading to keep appearance consistent.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor in many descriptions; plan canopy fill 2–3 seasons.
- Yield Potential: High table-fruit intent = high fruit drop if left unmanaged.
Arbequina | Catalonia, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Common SHD cultivar; lots of standardized nursery production exists.
- Growth Timeline: Typically earlier bearing/precocity relative to many cultivars (orchard trait).
- Yield Potential: Shown as productive in yield tables (fruit drop risk in landscapes).
Arbosana | Catalonia, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Another SHD staple; uniform nursery blocks are common.
- Growth Timeline: Often described as compact/managed canopy in intensive systems (good for smaller landscapes).
- Yield Potential: Included due to prevalence in U.S. plantings; expect meaningful fruiting when mature.
Manzanilla | Seville, Spain
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Very common in CA table plantings—easy to source uniform batches.
- Growth Timeline: Reliable, medium vigor; shapes predictably with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Listed with meaningful yields in cultivar yield tables; fruit drop considerations apply.
Hojiblanca | Andalusia, Spain
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Medium vigor; procurement specs drive uniformity more than cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Good canopy fill in sun/heat; plan structural pruning.
- Yield Potential: Produces meaningful yields in comparative table data.
Picual | Jaén, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Widely planted globally; easy to source consistent blocks for large projects.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous; good for faster canopy establishment.
- Yield Potential: Included in comparative U.S. cultivar work and yield discussions; expect fruiting when mature.
Sevillano | Spain
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Common commercial table cultivar in CA—bulk uniformity is achievable.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; large-canopy potential long-term.
- Yield Potential: High fruiting potential—avoid fruit drop zones unless client wants olives.
Mission | California, USA
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Classic CA heritage type; can vary more by source—tighten specs.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; develops characterful trunk with age.
- Yield Potential: Not compatible pollinizer with Manzanillo per UC ANR pollination guidance.
Kalamata | Greece
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Can be consistent if sourced from the same propagator; avoid mixed “Kalamata/Kalamon” labeling.
- Growth Timeline: Intermediate start of bearing (orchard trait); landscape canopy still needs 1–3 seasons.
- Yield Potential: High but alternate summary—fruit drop can be intermittent but heavy.
Koroneiki | Greece
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Common SHD cultivar; uniform lots are widely available.
- Growth Timeline: Compact habit in intensive systems; good for controlled landscape sizing.
- Yield Potential: High yields shown in yield comparisons (fruit drop considerations).
Cailletier | Provence, France
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Often referenced with Taggiasca synonym linkage; keep source consistent.
- Growth Timeline: Generally manageable size; good for tighter landscapes.
- Yield Potential: Fruiting cultivar—plan for olive drop management.
Picholine | France
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Usually consistent medium habit; good for uniform rows in projects.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate growth rate; easy to manage height and spread.
- Yield Potential: Fruiting cultivar; fruit drop likely without harvest.
Wilsonii | Mediterranean
- Tree Uniformity: Widely sold as a landscape standard—uniformity is very achievable in bulk.
- Varietal Suitability: Marketed as fruitless/cleaner landscape olive (reduced mess vs fruiting types).
- Growth Timeline: Full-sized shade tree potential (not a dwarf); plan spacing accordingly.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit compared to fruiting cultivars (key for hardscape/pool zones).
Swan Hill® | Australia
- Tree Uniformity: Excellent for bulk streetscapes—patented ornamental line used for uniform plantings.
- Varietal Suitability: Documented as an ornamental sterile cultivar (classic “fruitless olive”).
- Growth Timeline: Often described as vigorous/broad-canopied in landscape supply notes.
- Yield Potential: Sterile/near-no fruit is the key advantage for clean hardscape zones.
Little Ollie® Dwarf | California
- Tree Uniformity: Medium to large shrub
- Varietal Suitability: Commonly sold as fruitless landscape cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous ornamental growth; fast “finished” look with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit/clean landscape behavior is the point.
Majestic Beauty | California
- Tree Uniformity: Dense ornamental form; specify canopy density + trunk caliper.
- Varietal Suitability: Commonly sold as fruitless landscape cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous ornamental growth; fast “finished” look with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit/clean landscape behavior is the point.
Bismarck Palm | Madagascar
- Tree Uniformity: Strong single trunk; symmetrical silver-blue fan canopy.
- Varietal Suitability: Best for large-scale, high-impact landscapes in warm climates.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate; 30–60 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental focal-point palm.
Canary Island Date Palm | Canary Islands
- Tree Uniformity: Massive trunk with dense, symmetrical crown.
- Varietal Suitability: Mediterranean, coastal, and resort landscapes.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; can exceed 60 ft.
- Yield Potential: Produces ornamental dates (not commercially significant).
Italian Cyprus | Tuscany, Italy
- Used for wind block and landscape design
- Tree Uniformity: Tall slender tree
- Growth Timeline: Moderate to fast; can grow up to 50 ft.
Medjool Date Palm | Middle East
- Tree Uniformity: Tall, structured canopy; consistent orchard-form cultivars.
- Varietal Suitability: Arid and desert climates; commercial date production.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate to slow; long lifespan.
- Yield Potential: High-value edible dates (commercial production).
Mexican Fan Palm | Northwestern Mexico
- Tree Uniformity: Tall, slender trunk; uniform fan canopy.
- Varietal Suitability: Urban boulevards and skyline-defining installations.
- Growth Timeline: Fast-growing; 70–100 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental value only.
Pygmy Date Palm | Southeast Asia
- Tree Uniformity: Compact trunk; fine-textured arching fronds.
- Varietal Suitability: Accent planting, patios, entryways.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 6–12 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Produces small ornamental fruits.
Windmill Palm | China
- Tree Uniformity: Slender trunk with symmetrical fan crown.
- Varietal Suitability: Cooler climates; one of the most cold-hardy palms.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 20–40 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental landscape palm.
Mediterranean Fan Palm | Mediterranean
- Tree Uniformity: Clumping multi-trunk form; can be trained for consistent structure.
- Varietal Suitability: Mediterranean and drought-tolerant landscapes.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 10–20 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Small ornamental fruit; non-commercial.
Fruiting Olives Trees Field Grown and Containers
Frantoio | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Typically upright/strong framework; specify caliper + canopy training for consistent form.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate–vigorous once established; plan 1–2 seasons for “landscape look.”
- Yield Potential: Moderate–high yield potential (can create fruit drop issues in hardscape zones).
Leccino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Consistent upright canopy; good for uniform allees if trained early.
- Growth Timeline: Reliable medium vigor; shapes nicely with structural pruning.
- Yield Potential: Fruit set improves with cross-pollination; otherwise can be light/variable.
Maurino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Often shows graceful habit; specify staking/training for consistent structure.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; develops canopy quicker with early tip-pruning.
- Yield Potential: Often described as abundant/small fruit—more mess risk if placed near paving.
Pendolino | Tuscany, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Also known as the universal pollinator.
- Tree Uniformity: Naturally weeping/pendulous form—uniformity depends on consistent training height.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; canopy “fills in” well when structurally pruned.
- Yield Potential: Notable fruiting when pollinated—locate away from patios/parking.
Coratina | Puglia, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Tends to be robust; keep uniform via identical pruning schedule across lots.
- Growth Timeline: Often vigorous; can reach “screening” effect faster than slower cultivars.
- Yield Potential: High oil/production reputation—expect fruit drop unless managed/harvested.
Taggiasca | Liguria, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Often smaller-scale canopy; uniformity is easy if you standardize trunk height.
- Growth Timeline: Generally moderate; good for tighter landscape footprints.
- Yield Potential: Typically fruiting cultivar—place away from pools/pavers.
Ascolana | Marche, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Good for consistent “traditional CA olive” look when trained to a single leader.
- Growth Timeline: Solid canopy development; plan for formative pruning years 1–3.
- Yield Potential: High table-fruit potential = high mess potential near hardscape.
Nocellara del Belice (Castelvetrano) | Sicily, Italy
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Dense crown is commonly described—can be very consistent in rows.
- Growth Timeline: Often described as establishing into a small shade tree with a dense canopy.
- Yield Potential: Fruits in ~several years; expect fruit drop unless harvested/managed.
Bella di Cerignola | Apulia, Italy
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Typically selected for very large fruit—spec uniform grading to keep appearance consistent.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor in many descriptions; plan canopy fill 2–3 seasons.
- Yield Potential: High table-fruit intent = high fruit drop if left unmanaged.
Arbequina | Catalonia, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Common SHD cultivar; lots of standardized nursery production exists.
- Growth Timeline: Typically earlier bearing/precocity relative to many cultivars (orchard trait).
- Yield Potential: Shown as productive in yield tables (fruit drop risk in landscapes).
Arbosana | Catalonia, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Another SHD staple; uniform nursery blocks are common.
- Growth Timeline: Often described as compact/managed canopy in intensive systems (good for smaller landscapes).
- Yield Potential: Included due to prevalence in U.S. plantings; expect meaningful fruiting when mature.
Manzanilla | Seville, Spain
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Very common in CA table plantings—easy to source uniform batches.
- Growth Timeline: Reliable, medium vigor; shapes predictably with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Listed with meaningful yields in cultivar yield tables; fruit drop considerations apply.
Hojiblanca | Andalusia, Spain
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Medium vigor; procurement specs drive uniformity more than cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Good canopy fill in sun/heat; plan structural pruning.
- Yield Potential: Produces meaningful yields in comparative table data.
Picual | Jaén, Spain
- Use: Mainly used for olive oil.
- Tree Uniformity: Widely planted globally; easy to source consistent blocks for large projects.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous; good for faster canopy establishment.
- Yield Potential: Included in comparative U.S. cultivar work and yield discussions; expect fruiting when mature.
Sevillano | Spain
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Common commercial table cultivar in CA—bulk uniformity is achievable.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; large-canopy potential long-term.
- Yield Potential: High fruiting potential—avoid fruit drop zones unless client wants olives.
Mission | California, USA
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Classic CA heritage type; can vary more by source—tighten specs.
- Growth Timeline: Medium vigor; develops characterful trunk with age.
- Yield Potential: Not compatible pollinizer with Manzanillo per UC ANR pollination guidance.
Kalamata | Greece
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Can be consistent if sourced from the same propagator; avoid mixed “Kalamata/Kalamon” labeling.
- Growth Timeline: Intermediate start of bearing (orchard trait); landscape canopy still needs 1–3 seasons.
- Yield Potential: High but alternate summary—fruit drop can be intermittent but heavy.
Koroneiki | Greece
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Common SHD cultivar; uniform lots are widely available.
- Growth Timeline: Compact habit in intensive systems; good for controlled landscape sizing.
- Yield Potential: High yields shown in yield comparisons (fruit drop considerations).
Cailletier | Provence, France
- Use: Mainly used for table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Often referenced with Taggiasca synonym linkage; keep source consistent.
- Growth Timeline: Generally manageable size; good for tighter landscapes.
- Yield Potential: Fruiting cultivar—plan for olive drop management.
Picholine | France
- Use: Dual purpose used for olive oil and table olives.
- Tree Uniformity: Usually consistent medium habit; good for uniform rows in projects.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate growth rate; easy to manage height and spread.
- Yield Potential: Fruiting cultivar; fruit drop likely without harvest.
Fruitless Olive Trees Field Grown and Containers
Wilsonii | Mediterranean
- Tree Uniformity: Widely sold as a landscape standard—uniformity is very achievable in bulk.
- Varietal Suitability: Marketed as fruitless/cleaner landscape olive (reduced mess vs fruiting types).
- Growth Timeline: Full-sized shade tree potential (not a dwarf); plan spacing accordingly.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit compared to fruiting cultivars (key for hardscape/pool zones).
Swan Hill® | Australia
- Tree Uniformity: Excellent for bulk streetscapes—patented ornamental line used for uniform plantings.
- Varietal Suitability: Documented as an ornamental sterile cultivar (classic “fruitless olive”).
- Growth Timeline: Often described as vigorous/broad-canopied in landscape supply notes.
- Yield Potential: Sterile/near-no fruit is the key advantage for clean hardscape zones.
Little Ollie® Dwarf | California
- Tree Uniformity: Medium to large shrub
- Varietal Suitability: Commonly sold as fruitless landscape cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous ornamental growth; fast “finished” look with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit/clean landscape behavior is the point.
Majestic Beauty | California
- Tree Uniformity: Dense ornamental form; specify canopy density + trunk caliper.
- Varietal Suitability: Commonly sold as fruitless landscape cultivar.
- Growth Timeline: Medium–vigorous ornamental growth; fast “finished” look with pruning.
- Yield Potential: Very low fruit/clean landscape behavior is the point.
Specimen Palm Trees Field Grown and Containers
Bismarck Palm | Madagascar
- Tree Uniformity: Strong single trunk; symmetrical silver-blue fan canopy.
- Varietal Suitability: Best for large-scale, high-impact landscapes in warm climates.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate; 30–60 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental focal-point palm.
Canary Island Date Palm | Canary Islands
- Tree Uniformity: Massive trunk with dense, symmetrical crown.
- Varietal Suitability: Mediterranean, coastal, and resort landscapes.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; can exceed 60 ft.
- Yield Potential: Produces ornamental dates (not commercially significant).
Italian Cyprus | Tuscany, Italy
- Used for wind block and landscape design
- Tree Uniformity: Tall slender tree
- Growth Timeline: Moderate to fast; can grow up to 50 ft.
Medjool Date Palm | Middle East
- Tree Uniformity: Tall, structured canopy; consistent orchard-form cultivars.
- Varietal Suitability: Arid and desert climates; commercial date production.
- Growth Timeline: Moderate to slow; long lifespan.
- Yield Potential: High-value edible dates (commercial production).
Mexican Fan Palm | Northwestern Mexico
- Tree Uniformity: Tall, slender trunk; uniform fan canopy.
- Varietal Suitability: Urban boulevards and skyline-defining installations.
- Growth Timeline: Fast-growing; 70–100 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental value only.
Pygmy Date Palm | Southeast Asia
- Tree Uniformity: Compact trunk; fine-textured arching fronds.
- Varietal Suitability: Accent planting, patios, entryways.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 6–12 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Produces small ornamental fruits.
Windmill Palm | China
- Tree Uniformity: Slender trunk with symmetrical fan crown.
- Varietal Suitability: Cooler climates; one of the most cold-hardy palms.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 20–40 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Ornamental landscape palm.
Mediterranean Fan Palm | Mediterranean
- Tree Uniformity: Clumping multi-trunk form; can be trained for consistent structure.
- Varietal Suitability: Mediterranean and drought-tolerant landscapes.
- Growth Timeline: Slow to moderate; 10–20 ft mature height.
- Yield Potential: Small ornamental fruit; non-commercial.
Call Now
(619) 384-4305