Tanche, along with Grossanne and Aglandau, belongs to the holy French trinity - the three varieties complement each other perfectly not only in terms of winter hardiness but also on the table and even in the grove.
Offshoots of these varieties survived the French winter of the century in the mid-1950s - even rushing waters were frozen - a large part of the olive groves were destroyed.
It is best to place them together with Aglandau and Grossanne at a distance of 3-5 meters.
Offshoots of these varieties survived the French winter of the century in the mid-1950s - even rushing waters were frozen - a large part of the olive groves were destroyed.
It is best to place them together with Aglandau and Grossanne at a distance of 3-5 meters.
Tanche, along with Grossanne and Aglandau, belongs to the holy French trinity - the three varieties complement each other perfectly not only in terms of winter hardiness but also on the table and even in the grove.
Offshoots of these varieties survived the French winter of the century in the mid-1950s - even rushing waters were frozen - a large part of the olive groves were destroyed.
It is best to place them together with Aglandau and Grossanne at a distance of 3-5 meters.
Offshoots of these varieties survived the French winter of the century in the mid-1950s - even rushing waters were frozen - a large part of the olive groves were destroyed.
It is best to place them together with Aglandau and Grossanne at a distance of 3-5 meters.
Hardy
up to -20°C
fertilization
Self-pollinating
Origin
France

Harvest your own olives of the variety
Tranche
Hardy olive from France .