Olive
Arbequina Pollination Guide
Arbequina can set some fruit on its own, but produces significantly better crops with a pollination partner.
While Arbequina has some ability to self-pollinate, you'll get noticeably larger harvests and better fruit quality with a compatible variety planted nearby. For the best results, plant one of the recommended partners within 50–100 feet.
Arbequina Quick Facts
Chill Hours
250 hours
Hardiness Zones
8, 9, 10, 11
Harvest
September to November
Pollination Note
Self-fertile but cross-pollination with another variety like Mission increases yield significantly
Planning Your Orchard
While many olive varieties are partially self-fertile, yields improve significantly with a second variety nearby. Choose varieties with overlapping bloom periods.
Browse our orchard planning guide or explore the full permanent plant catalog to find the right varieties for your garden.
Keep a record of every tree you plant — variety, rootstock, location.
Start your free tree log →Compatible Pollination Partners
Can I Grow Arbequina?
Check if your climate has enough chill hours for Arbequina. Use GPS, map, or zip code for an instant answer.
Check your location →Interactive Pollination Checker
Compare pollination compatibility across all 85+ fruit varieties in our database.
Open checker →Most people forget within a year.
Which pairs fruited well, what bloomed when, what you did each season — write it down from the start.
Free for up to 30 plants. No card needed.
About Arbequina
Arbequina is the compact, early-bearing olive that's revolutionized small-scale olive growing — producing fruit in just 2-3 years with a graceful, weeping habit perfect for containers and hedgerows. The small fruits yield premium, buttery oil with low bitterness.
Growing Challenges
Not cold-hardy below 20°F; small fruit size makes hand-harvesting tedious; needs well-drained soil or root rot follows.
Frequently Asked Questions
How close does a pollinator need to be to Arbequina?
For reliable pollination, plant the partner variety within 50–100 feet of Arbequina. Bees are the primary pollinators and typically work within this range. In practice, a tree in your yard or even a neighbor's nearby tree can work. The closer the trees, the more consistent the fruit set.
Can I grow just one Arbequina tree?
You can, but you'll get significantly better harvests with a compatible partner nearby. Arbequina is partially self-fertile — it will set some fruit alone, but cross-pollination dramatically improves yield and fruit quality.
Other Olive Varieties
Related Tools
Pollination Checker
Interactive tool to find compatible pollination partners for any fruit tree.
Can I Grow Arbequina?
Check if your zip code has enough chill hours for this variety.
Chill Hour Checker
Validate chill hours for any fruit tree variety by zip code.
Frost Date Finder
Find your first and last frost dates to plan bloom protection.
Pollination data compiled from university extension services, the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) pollination group charts, RosBREED cherry S-allele research, and nursery compatibility guides. Pollination compatibility can vary by region and microclimate. For best results, consult your local extension office.