The Marvels Of A 2000 Year Old Olive Tree in Israel

ancient olive tree in Israel permaculture photoThe olive tree in this photo is reputed to be 2000 years old – give or take a century or so.

It’s growing in a grove just above the village of Deir Hanna, in the North of Israel, one of five there that have attained record-breaking ages.

I was a part of a group of ecology-minded people from Gezer, my kibbutz, and some friends who visited these trees on a trip to the nearby city of Sakhnin last summer.

We went there to see new and traditional methods of building and water treatment. After we all stuffed ourselves silly on hummus and salads in downtown Sakhnin, our guide and friend Jan, a permaculture instructor and writer, led us up a winding hillside road to see these forgotten leafy treasures. 

Touching any living thing that’s so inconceivably old is awe-inspiring. But unlike the other ancient trees I’ve walked around – giant old-growth redwoods, whose looming trunks John Muir aptly described as “cathedrals,” reminding you of your petty insignificance – these trees connect one directly to human history. They’re recognizably agriculture, planted by humans in familiar patterns.

Rather than growing tall and stately, their trunks have spread outward, becoming ever more twisted and gnarled with time – sometimes even splitting into separate trunks – as though they’re hunkering down to withstand the ravages of eons.

Ancient producers and what they’ve “seen”

Amazingly enough, these trees are still producing olives. It gives a whole new meaning to the term “sustainable agriculture.”

They’ve probably been owned and tended by Jews, Christians and Muslims, and who knows how many others, passed down in families for generations until someone else took them over. Not to mention all the Romans, Crusaders, Ottomans and others who’ve passed by while these olives have been quietly growing on their hillside just a few kilometers to the west of the Sea of Galilee.

Although olive trees are native to this region, and among the hardiest of trees, the fact that these ones are still around is evidence that for most of those 2000 years, someone made sure they got water here and there, pruned their branches once in a while and protected them from human destruction, fire, animals and disease.

The string around the bottom of the tree in the photo is a measuring tape. It was brought by one of our group who is a tree expert and ancient tree enthusiast. Apparently measuring the trunk circumference is the best way to estimate the age of an olive tree.

Although drilling a small core to the center of a tree and counting the rings is generally considered a more accurate way to date it, with olive trees you can easily miss the earliest wood, as it doesn’t grow in nice, even rings. (Anyone who has ever contemplated the grain of one of those olivewood carvings they sell to tourists here knows what I’m talking about.)

After our expert rolled up his tape, we measured the largest tree in another way – joining hands around the trunk. As I recall, we were something like 20 adults and children, and it took all of us, arms stretched wide, to encircle it.

These trees are mentioned in a Wikipedia article on olives (which claims they are 3000 years old, but is otherwise a fairly informative resource).  Every archaeological site in Israel worth its oil boasts at least one olive press, oil storage amphora or stash of shriveled, ancient olive pits hiding in the bottom of a clay pot. 

This issue of Gems in Israel from 2000 has some articles on olives in history, archaeology and tourism.  Anyone interested in green building in Sakhnin can read this article, in English, on the Ministry of the Environment website. The site has more information on the Sakhnin environmental center in Hebrew.

(This is a guest post by Eda Goldstein, a writer and member of Kibbutz Gezer in central Israel. She has worked as a veggie cook and head of the kibbutz kitchen, a dairy farmer and a plumber. In her spare time, she grows herbs and vegetables in old watering troughs, reads, cooks and hatches plots to build a green neighborhood on the kibbutz. It is x-posted on The Jew and the Carrot). 

More on olives and olive oil:
Power Your Wood Stove With Olive Tree Waste From Israel
Fair Trade Olive Oil “Zaytoun” From Israel
Ran Morin and Nature in the Middle East

4 COMMENTS
  1. Hey, nice article but you didn’t reveal your conclusion of the age of the tree after measuring the tree with a tape measure or joining hands.

Comments are closed.

TRENDING

Everything is better when you spend 5 days in a cave

She spent 5 days in a cave in the dark. See what it did to her body.

Make nettle dumplings, also known as nettles malfatti

Springtime foraging yields a harvest of wild greens to cook at home, like nettles. Make delicious nettles malfatti dumplings with this recipe.

Earth building with Dead Sea salt bricks

Researchers develop a brick made largely from recycled Dead Sea salt—offering a potential alternative to carbon-intensive cement.

Farm To Table Israel Connects People To The Land

Farm To Table Israel is transforming the traditional dining experience into a hands-on journey.

Sustainability That Sells: How Profit and Purpose Come Together in the Hive

Whether you are a commercial grower, hobbyist beekeeper or retail equipment supplier, this system opens a new income stream with minimal environmental impact.

Turning Your Energy Consultancy into an LLC: 4 Legal Steps for Founders in Texas

If you are starting a renewable energy business in Texas, learn how to start an LLC by the books.

Tracking the Impacts of a Hydroelectric Dam Along the Tigris River

For the next two months, I'll be taking a break from my usual Green Prophet posts to report on a transnational environmental issue: the Ilısu Dam currently under construction in Turkey, and the ways it will transform life along the Tigris River.

6 Payment Processors With the Fastest Onboarding for SMBs

Get your SMB up and running fast with these 6 payment processors. Compare the quickest onboarding options to start accepting customer payments without delay.

Qatar’s climate hypocrisy rides the London Underground

Qatar remains a master of doublethink—burning gas by the megaton while selling “sustainability” to a world desperate for clean air. Wake up from your slumber people.

How Quality of Hire Shapes Modern Recruitment

A 2024 survey by Deloitte found that 76% of talent leaders now consider long-term retention and workforce contribution among their most important hiring success metrics—far surpassing time-to-fill or cost-per-hire. As the expectations for new hires deepen, companies must also confront the inherent challenges in redefining and accurately measuring hiring quality.

8 Team-Building Exercises to Start the Week Off 

Team building to change the world! The best renewable energy companies are ones that function.

Thank you, LinkedIn — and what your Jobs on the Rise report means for sustainable careers

While “green jobs” aren’t always labeled as such, many of the fastest-growing roles are directly enabling the energy transition, climate resilience, and lower-carbon systems: Number one on their list is Artificial Intelligence engineers. But what does that mean? Vibe coding Claude? 

Somali pirates steal oil tankers

The pirates often stage their heists out of Somalia, a lawless country, with a weak central government that is grappling with a violent Islamist insurgency. Using speedboats that swarm the targets, the machine-gun-toting pirates take control of merchant ships and then hold the vessels, crew and cargo for ransom.

Related Articles

Popular Categories