Lavender in front yard


Landscaping with lavender: 16 ways to use this classic

Whatever your garden style there's always room for some landscaping with lavender. It's equally at home planted in loose drifts in a Mediterranean or cottage garden, and works well clipped into smart geometric designs in modern urban spaces too. It's also the queen of containers and window boxes to dress up the front of the house.

Lavender looks great used as repeat planting to divide up or add interest to herb gardens. Lavender itself is actually a herb and is related the mint family which accounts for the fact it slots so beautifully into herb garden designs. 

It can also be used as low hedging to zone flower beds, as well as for edging paths and framing the approach to entrances, so you get hit by a waft of fragrance every time you pass by. If you're interested in creating a sensory or wildlife garden landscaping with lavender is a must too, as it attracts pollinators in their droves.

Lavender can easily be worked into your landscaping ideas and has been grown in gardens since late medieval times, so no wonder it's popular as that kind of track record speaks for itself. The scented spikes of blue, mauve and purple (and occasionally white) flowers bloom right through summer too. 

(Image credit: Photolinchen/GettyImages)

Everyone loves lavender. 'It's one of my favourite plants to grow to create a beautiful cottage garden,' says plant expert Sarah Raven . 'The variety 'Hidcote’ is the most floriferous of the compact lavenders, with lovely purple-blue flowers. It's perfect to line the front of a sunny border or planted up in pots. It's incredibly scented too, and rich in pollen and nectar for much of the summer, so bees and butterflies love it.'

We've brought together all the inspiration you need for your own garden, whether you're searching for front yard landscaping ideas to add curb appeal, or simple ways to beautify your space in an instant with some gorgeous lavender planting ideas.

(Image credit: Leigh Clapp Photography/Future)

Every garden path needs an edging of lavender that you can brush your fingers through as you walk by. 'Whenever lavender is used it's always important to ensure that at least some is planted close to a path so that the delicious scent is released as you brush past,' says landscape designer Helen Elks-Smith, who appears regularly on the BBC's Your Garden Made Perfect. 

Edging a path with lavender plants looks so pretty too. Making the planting symmetrical so that both sides match as much as possible is a design trick that works every time for stunning garden path ideas, especially if you're looking for a professional looking finishing touch.

2. Try underplanting trees with lavender

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Why leave soil bare when you can make the most of the space underneath trees by filling it with pretty plants. This layered look maximizes interest and is known as ‘underplanting’. It's a great way of landscaping around trees by introducing a tapestry of plants.

It’s good for cramming more color and plants into a small garden when space is tight too. Plus of course it means less weeding, as the extra layer of plants around the base of the tree helps to stop weeds from growing. 

Choose two or three plants that work well together with the shrub or tree you want to underplant, in terms of color, shape and texture. Lavender is always a winner and here it's paired with flowering chives to create an eye-catching display.

3. Let lavender tumble over walls

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Imagine an old stone garden wall baking in the sunshine with lavender bushes growing next to it. It's a staple look in cottage gardens, where of course fragrance is the cornerstone of any design and helps to attract pollinators too.

It's easy to transform dull boundaries with the best plants for garden walls and lavender definitely fits into this category. Although it's not the type of plant to cling to walls or settle in crevices, soft cushions of lavender will thrive next to a sunny wall or in raised wall beds, particularly if situated in a sunny spot.

4. Choose partner plants that lavender loves

(Image credit: Helen Elks-Smith)

'Lavender is really useful when designing planting schemes,' says landscape designer Helen Elks-Smith. 'Well known as a traditional companion for landscaping with roses and when combined with herbaceous plants such as delphiniums, salvia Caradonna and fleabane (Erigeron karvinskianus), it creates a  gentle, pretty scheme.' 

Here Helen uses lavender plants that are just coming into flower and illustrates how alliums can be great companion plants to extend the season of interest. Combining lavender with other plants like santolina ‘Edward Bowles’ with its cream button-like flowers and purple sage (Salvia officinalis Purpurascens) will take the scheme in another direction altogether giving a more Mediterranean look and feel to your landscaping with lavender ideas. 

5. Plant lavender around seats

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Every garden needs a comfortable place to sit, somewhere you can enjoy being immersed in all it has to offer.  The planting can add a sensory experience to the enjoyment of the garden, somewhere that offers a restful interlude for your outdoor seating ideas.

Scented plants come into their own in spaces like this and none more so than lavender. 'Every garden smells better with lavender,' says Sarah Squire of Squire's Garden Centres . 'This evergreen shrub brings long-lasting colour and scent in summer, and attracts bees and butterflies in droves. It's one of our most sought-after plants.'

The best variety to choose is English lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), which is strongly scented, and covered in masses of purple-blue flowers with silvery-grey leaves. Favorite varieties include ‘Hidcote’ and ‘Munstead’. 

6. Add lavender to a herb garden

(Image credit: Nancy Kennedy/GettyImages)

If you're looking for lovely herb garden ideas try including lavender in the mix. It's a magnet for pollinating insects so will attract all the right visitors. Plus of course lavender itself is a herb so it will slot seamlessly into the mix.

When you've chosen a bed for your herb garden add repeat planting of lavender throughout in a loose and naturalistic style to tie together the design.

Alternatively show off the beauty of a lavender and herb mix with a more formal design in a potager garden. Since ancient times herb gardens have been laid out in geometric patterns and this parterre style suits small urban gardens really well. 

Featuring low evergreen boundaries of plants such as trimmed lavender is one of the easiest herb garden designs to get right too and is also a great way of landscaping with lavender.

7. Border steps with lavender

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Framing steps either side with swathes of uniform planting is a really eye-catching design. The idea of creating a stairway of flowers is one of our favorite looks when landscaping with hydrangeas too.

There is quite a choice when it comes to lavender varieties to use to create a look like this. The hardy, low-growing 'Hidcote' is a good choice for garden edging ideas but the main thing to remember is that all lavender varieties love a sunny position. So give your lavender what it needs by making it feel at home in a sheltered sun trap that offers protection.

(Image credit: Jacky Parker Photography/GettyImages)

The soft mauve-blue palette and beautiful scent of lavender, as well as the soothing buzz of bees hovering over the flowers on a summer’s day, are a heavenly addition to any garden but particularly for sensory garden ideas. 

The best variety to choose is English lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), which is strongly scented, and covered in masses of purple-blue flowers with silvery-grey leaves. Favourite varieties for scent include ‘Hidcote’ and ‘Munstead’. 

French lavender (Lavandula stoecha) has flowers that are a different shape to the English varieties, topped by pretty feathery tufts, but their scent is not as strong.

Find out how to take lavender cuttings and you can get even more lavender for planting in drifts in your sensory garden.

9. Landscape with lavender in a rock garden

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Soft cushions of planting interspersed with pebbles and rocks is a landscaping with lavender choice that suits most spaces and can be left to evolve from year to year. It's one of the low maintenance garden border ideas that takes inspiration from the natural scenery of the Mediterranean.

If you're landscaping with river rocks, the gaps between the stones will soon be colonized by drifts of low-growing lavender which helps your landscaping design subtly evolve into a naturalistic and wild look. 

How much your lavender plants will spread varies significantly according to the variety and whether they are receiving the right care, primarily in terms of sunlight, soil and regular pruning.

10. Introduce a smartly clipped border

(Image credit: Future)

Imagine the wonderful scent and color you would enjoy on warm days right through summer if you were passing by on your way to this garden retreat!

A border of lavender works particularly well as a smart lawn edging idea and for zoning different areas of the garden.  

As well as looking good it's a great low maintenance garden design option too. Remember that gravel isn’t just for driveways and paths. Use it as a decorative mulch in the border to show off plants like lavender really well. If you spread a thick layer of gravel on top of a weed suppressing membrane it cuts down on garden chores too.

11. Frame a doorway with lavender

(Image credit: Polly Eltes/Future)

As you walk up your path one of the most welcoming sensations on arriving home is being hit by a waft of delicious fragrance. Planting lavender is one of the best front porch ideas to really give your entrance the standout factor whether you decide to opt for a traditional or more modern garden design. 

Landscaping with lavender around doors and windows will fill your garden with delicious scent and soft color hues all summer long in a way that's reminiscent of sun-baked settings in Provence.

12. Put lavender top for Med-inspired gardens

(Image credit: Åsa Gregers-Warg/Beth Chatto’s Plants and Gardens)

Plants that work for Mediterranean garden ideas predominantly love hot and sunny conditions with free-draining soil. This suits lavender perfectly. Typically it will have a gravel mulch to help keep any moisture in the soil and reduce the need for watering. 

Lavender is a key component in Mediterranean gardens design-wise too, as repeat planting adds, shape and form creating a rhythm that guides the eye through the planting for a cohesive feel.

‘To create a mid-layer plant lavender, together with cistus, santolina and euphorbia,' suggests Åsa Gregers-Warg, head gardener at Beth Chatto . 'Add splashes of colour with agapanthus, nepeta and bearded iris, while Verbena bonariensis and Russian sage make superb vertical shapes.’ 

To introduce softness, try landscaping with grasses using ornamental Stipa gigantea and Stipa tenuissima, which both work really well with lavender. 

13. Mix lavender plants with topiary

(Image credit: Leigh Clapp Photography/Future)

Strong structural elements like evergreen topiary paired with lavender has been used for centuries in grand country gardens, but the same technique can be used to great effect in smaller gardens too.  

Smart clipped topiary such as lollipop-shaped trees and low hedging contrasted with beds of soft planting works by introducing a touch of elegance to landscaping with lavender ideas. 

‘Clipped evergreens make a wonderful, neutral backdrop and a foil for looser planting around them,’ says award-winning landscape designer Robert Myers . Enclosing softly billowing lavender plants in a framework of clipped green foliage simply amplifies its beauty.

14. Use lavender for ground cover

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Low-growing varieties of lavender can be mixed in with other flowers and planted densely in garden borders and beds as hard working ground cover plants. Not only does this give the effect of full planting (the idea is no bare soil should be seen) but it means there's less chance of weeds popping up too. 

Aim to create a tapestry effect by using different flowers and foliage to add interesting shapes and textures. Choose the best low maintenance ground cover plants and you will create a beautiful garden that will virtually take care of itself.

Using ground cover plants is one of our favorite cheap landscaping ideas too.

15. Create a wow factor front yard with lavender

(Image credit: Future)

One of the easiest ways to improve the look of your home is to smarten up the front garden by giving it a makeover. This is where landscaping with lavender comes in. It will create a welcoming entrance as well as being an easy low-maintenance option that looks both modern and stylish. 

Symmetry and structure are key when it comes to designing a smart front garden, and when it comes to planting keeping it simple is often the way to go for the best results. Well-defined flower beds, solid areas of planting and straight lines are a good starting point, and this works for small front garden ideas too. 

Opt for a neat and formal look with clearly defined lavender beds. Think about how your house can be framed by planting and what can be quickly installed to enhance the facade such as elegant potted topiary to contrast with the soft beds of lavender.

16. Mix up old and new

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Sometimes the best garden design ideas mix up themes such as modern and new. Lavender is one of the best plants for rockeries, which are essentially an old classic that are being dressed up fresh for 2022 by using on-trend garden gravel ideas such as white chippings for a very contemporary smart new look. 

Landscaping with Lavender | 7 Garden Design Ideas

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Landscaping with Lavender is easy and adds a colorful carpet in the yard! We have some of the best ideas for you!

Here are some amazing Landscaping with Lavender ideas that will surely help you to use this fragrant herb in your garden in the best way possible!

Here’s all you need to know about growing Lavender

How to Do Landscaping with Lavender?

1.

A Lavender Flower Bed

A beautiful combination of Californian poppies and lavender flanking the walkway! Orange and purple colors give a warm appearance to a garden.

2. Lavender Sloping Garden

If you want to grow something around the sloping space of your garden, grow lavender. This will make it one of the most amazing lavender landscapes.

3. Lavender Fences

Lavender can be grown along garden fences. Its cool color, when used near the borders and boundaries, creates an illusion of enlarged space.

Find out the best Lavender varieties here

4. Covering Borders with Lavender

Growing lavender in borders is one of the most amazing landscape ideas. It looks wonderful and attracts bees and butterflies.

5. A Beautiful Lavender Hedge

Drought-tolerant and deer-resistant, lavenders are the perfect plant to make hedges. Tall varieties like french lavender and ‘royal purple’ are the best.


Some More Landscaping with Lavender Ideas

6. Lavender-Lined Garden Pathway

Rosemary Fletcher

With an amazing color that shines in the sun, it makes for an excellent plant to surround the garden pathway on each side. It is one of the most amazing landscape ideas with lavender.

Is It Possible To Grow Lavender In Tropics? Click here

7. Lavender Bushed with Garden Path

These thick lavender bushes are perfect for any garden and will make everyone feel like paradise.

8. Lavender Flower Bed with Shrubs

pro-dachnikov

Love lavender in the landscape? These lavenders are perfect for a touch of stunning color to any flower bed.

9. Lavender Shrub Garden

miguelurquijopaisajismo

Have a large garden? Why not turn it into a Lavender shrub garden like this amazing display of green and purple foliage?

10. A Colorful Garden Path with Lavender

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An amazing Landscaping with lavender idea that uses the plant with pink and white blooming plants to create a mesmerizing garden path.

Look at the Best Purple Houseplants here

11. A Tribute to Lavender Fields

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Fill the garden with a lavender field landscape that covers the entire space with lavender shrubs.

12. Lush Lavender Fields

TripAdvisor

Why settle for less if you have more? Turn the country home into a scene from a movie with this landscaping with lavender idea for a lavender field landscape that reaches as far as the eyes can see.

13. Lavender for Vibrant Purple in the Garden

Ron Lutsko design

Lavender paired with golden and dark green foliage is an amazing garden idea to make it stand out.

Learn about Growing Lavender from Cuttings here

14. Lavender Pathway and Patio Idea

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You can also enjoy lush lavenders by planting them adjacent to your patio.

15. Lavender Flower Bed Garden Design

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With green-golden grass, this lavender flower bed idea is an eye-catcher that will definitely allure everyone.

16. A Purple Hill of Lavender

Plant lavenders on a hill and watch how it turns into a magical landscape straight out of a Disney movie.

17. Lavender Entry for Front of Home

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Want your guests to arrive with a smile? Spruce up your home entry with this front yard lavender landscaping, and line the path with Lavenders.

Find out the Best Flowering Houseplants here

18. Backyard Garden with Lavender Shrubs

Add a touch of color with this lavender landscape idea of a backyard garden full of lavenders among white and pink blooms.

19. Lavender Hedge for Brick House Pathways

Love lavender landscape ideas? Here’s another one. Create a lavender hedge for a gravel path to complement a bricked house or a cottage with this front yard lavender landscaping idea.

20. Lavender Shrubs in Gravel

Another of the best lavender landscaping ideas is planting lavender varieties in a semi-circular fashion in a gravel bed.

Check out How to Care for Lavender in Winter here

21. Lavender Shrubs on Country Home Road

There is definitely something about this country road full of lavender shrubs that fill you up with happiness each time you look at this lavender landscape. It is one of the most gorgeous lavender landscaping ideas.

22. Brick Path with Lavender Shrubs

laidbackgardener

Want a unique garden path with one of the most stunning lavender landscaping ideas? Create a brick path surrounded by lavender shrubs!

23. A Patio Among Lavenders

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Create a patio surrounded by green shrubs and beautiful lavenders for an amazing unwinding and dining place. This is truly one of the best lavender landscape ideas.

Here’s everything you need to know about growing lavender in pots

24. Dense Lavender Flower Bed

Love lavender but don’t wanna work much? Try an effortless lavender landscaping idea and turn any garden or flowerbed into a beauty just like this lavender plants landscape design.

25. Lavenders for Home Entry

These lavenders near the home entry are an absolute work of art. Imagine coming home after a long day and being greeted by such amazing foliage and a stunning lavender landscape.

Check out some quick tips on overwintering Lavender here

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7 simple rules for chic lavender. Planting, care, reproduction. Photo — Botanichka

Let me confess my love today. In love... for lavender. One of the best unpretentious, evergreen and flowering shrubs that can be successfully grown in your garden. And if someone thinks that lavender is a Mediterranean or, at least, southern inhabitant, then you are mistaken. Lavender grows well in more northern regions, even in the Moscow region. But in order to grow it, you need to know some rules and features. They will be discussed in this article.

7 Simple Rules for Gorgeous Lavender

1. Lavender in Garden Design – Goes Anywhere

You have many options here. I like to build on the natural habitat of a particular plant. In nature, lavender grows in dry and rocky areas. Therefore, individual bushes scattered between the stones will look organic and quite natural.

Lavender can be used to make beautiful borders along paths. Not only is it beautiful, but touching these bushes with your foot, you will hear an unforgettable aroma, even when there are no flowers on it.

Their height may vary depending on the variety you choose. Let's say Blue Scent grows by 30 cm, and Hidcote Giant by all 60 or even 70 cm. By the way, such lavender borders can be made not only along the paths, but also along not very attractive places, reliably covering them, for example, along the concrete foundation of a house or around a cesspool.

Lavender blends well with other plants and can be used to create mixborders. Either by combining it with plants that bloom in blue-violet, or, conversely, using contrast, next to plants that bloom in yellow.

Compositions with plants that have a similar color (silver-gray) and foliage texture look good: Bieberstein's sapling, santolina, sage, etc. The main thing is that companion plants do not block sunlight for lavender.

The combination of lavender and roses is considered a classic, creating a harmonious unity of both color and fragrance. But there is one subtlety here. In addition to the fact that you can not block the lavender from the sun, the rose, to put it mildly, has somewhat different (directly opposite) requirements for soil composition and watering. When creating such a composition, it is worth taking everything into account.

Even if you decide to grow a single lavender bush, there is a place for it, either as a tapeworm on a mowed lawn, or as a plant in a large container (at least 2 liters) in a recreation area.

By the way, you can decorate the recreation area with a small spicy-aromatic flower bed, where, along with lavender, you can include rosemary, sage, mint, yarrow, oregano. And if some of these plants do not winter in your open ground, then in such a garden for the summer you can place containers with them. In addition to beauty and aroma, maybe you will scare away mosquitoes.

Read also our article 15 plants that will drive mosquitoes away from the site.

In principle, you can try growing lavender among garden crops to repel harmful insects. And besides my growing 16 bushes, I have a dream - a whole lavender field ...

Lavender bushes gradually grow old and become bare - after 5-6 years they should be changed. © Gina Lessiter

2. The right place for luxurious lavender


If, like me, you decide that there should be a lot of lavender, then you should keep in mind that you need to plant bushes at a certain distance from each other, and it depends on the particular variety (it is worth studying them).

For example, there are lavender bushes that grow up to 30 cm in diameter in adulthood, which means that it is better to plant them with the same distance - 30 cm. And if the variety grows to 70 cm, then it is worth making a distance of 70 cm between them. Then when planting, you must follow the rule when the edges of the bushes touch, but do not crawl on top of each other.

Lavender likes neutral to slightly alkaline soil. If the soils on your site are slightly acidic, then it is necessary to neutralize them before planting by adding special components (sold in garden stores), say, dolomite flour.

Lavender will never tolerate stagnant water, the water should quickly leave the root zone, the soil should be light. The sun is what lavender really needs! Open and sunny planting sites guarantee good growth and abundant flowering. In partial shade, she will also survive, but will look less impressive.

Not only should the sun bake lavender from above, it is desirable to heat it from below as well. To do this, unusual materials are used as mulch for lavender: neither compost, nor peat, nor, God forbid, manure, will work. Stones, rubble, pebbles, marble chips (if finances allow) are the best mulch for her. During the day, heating up, at night the stones give off their heat to lavender.

3. Lack of care is optimal "care"


Lavender care, as such, is virtually non-existent. No fertilizer, moreover, lavender prefers to grow on poor soils. Also, she may well do without watering, she will have enough "heavenly" irrigation. The only thing she needs is pruning.

4. Pruning - at least after flowering


Of course, it's a matter of taste, it is possible without pruning, but, in my opinion, lavender should be pruned regularly. Without pruning, the bush becomes bare and loses its decorative effect, which we love to look at on Internet pictures. At least once a season, lavender is cut off (after flowering). Shorten young shoots by 1/3.

But I cut it twice a year. In the spring - before the start of growth, and after flowering. The most important thing to remember is not to trim the lavender too much, affecting the lignified parts. The plant may die.

Cutting lavender at the moment of full and maximum opening of all flowers is necessary for making tea and cosmetics

5. Harvesting - at the right time

Why do we grow lavender on our plots? Of course, this is a great element of garden design, both beautifully flowering and fragrant. But you can also harvest from lavender. If you cut off the first flowers, then closer to autumn, wait for the second wave of flowering. Although, it's up to you to decide - either these flowers will decorate your garden or your home.

Lavender flowers make excellent dried flowers, but in order for them to stand well in a vase until the new season, cut flower stalks at the very beginning of flowering, when not all flowers have opened.

If you want to use lavender flowers for making tea, cosmetics, etc. , then you should cut them off at the moment of full and maximum disclosure of all flowers. At this time, the content of essential oils is maximum. Cut flowers with peduncles are tied in bunches and hung upside down to dry indoors.

For the use of lavender as a medicinal herb, see article 9 herbs to relieve anxiety and insomnia.

6. Shelter for the winter - optional

In the southern regions, lavender feels great even without shelter. Moreover, many gardeners play it safe and, in fact, only make things worse. In a warm climate, with mild frosts, fungal diseases begin to develop on lavender under cover, or it rots.

In the northern regions shelter is usually essential, but it is difficult to give advice on regions. You should either study the experience of neighbors growing this chic shrub, or actively propagate it and experiment with shelter.

There is good news for northern lavender lovers – lavender can be grown at home in a pot. Yes, in the summer it is worth taking it out into the sun, and in the winter it should be kept on a cool windowsill. The container for the normal development of the plant should be taken high, since its root goes deep.

Lavender field is a dream!

7. We propagate lavender ourselves


If you decide to acquire this wonderful plant, then the easiest way is to try to grow it from seeds. The selection of seeds in garden stores is large, just keep in mind that there are different types and varieties of lavender, differing in their frost resistance, height, width of the bush, and even flower color. It is believed that for most non-southern regions, angustifolia lavender is better suited, as it is more frost-resistant.

So, the seeds were purchased. You can sow them in the spring in a container and wait for seedlings. But, from my own experience, I will say that germination noticeably increases with 30 day stratification - lavender will sprout more and more amicably.

How to stratify lavender seeds? Yes, very simple. Place the container with the sown seeds in a refrigerator or cellar at a temperature of about + 4 ... + 5 degrees. Keep the soil constantly moist - just wrap the container in plastic wrap. After a month, take it out and put it in heat, the shoots will not take long to wait.

Read more about stratification in our article 6 rules for seed stratification at home.

After the appearance of the first true leaves, the seedlings should be picked into individual cups. This is how you can get many lavender seedlings at once. And there should be a lot of lavender!

There are other methods of reproduction. You can cut and root shoots, you can pin layering to the ground, you can divide the bush, or you can just spud the plant with earth in the fall, completely filling the space between the stems. Closer to summer, you will find that there are many rooted branches inside this earthen mound. We cut and plant. In general, all methods are good for propagating lavender.

Interesting facts about lavender


Lavender comes not only in shades of purple, but also in white and pink.

Since the 17th century, lavender has been cultivated in France for the production of perfumes. Maybe try? If not perfume, then lotions or soap with lavender can definitely be done by everyone.

Lavender is a good honey plant.

Lavender bushes gradually age and become exposed - after 5-6 years they should be replaced.

Boil 3 tablespoons of dried lavender flowers, 2 cups of milk and 0.5 cup of honey for a soothing and fragrant bath elixir.

How to do this: In a mojito glass, crush fresh mint leaves, a slice of lemon, a spoonful of honey and a handful of dried lavender flowers with a pestle. Pour all this with mineral water with ice. In the summer heat, in between hilling potatoes - what you need! Or maybe try dry wine or champagne instead of water? Have a good mood!

Where to plant lavender in the garden: tips and tricks

Where to plant lavender in the garden: tips and tricks

04. 12.2016

A variety of plants in a flower bed or windowsill is always pleasing to the eye and decorates the area. Lavender often becomes an element of flower arrangements, but has some peculiarities in planting and care. With their proper observance, you can observe its lush color and smell, but if you do not take into account all the nuances, you can lose the beauty of such a shrub.

How to plant lavender on the plot

When choosing a variety of lavender for planting, it is better to give preference to those that are adapted to the conditions of the region. In this matter, you can contact local breeders. Lavender does not like frost and this must be taken into account when planting it. The ideal time to plant this plant in the soil is early spring. First, the bush must be placed in water for 1-1.5 hours, and then cut off the apical part. Lavender is planted in beds about 40 cm high. The recommended depth of the pit is 30 cm. All excess roots and branches must be removed. Tall lavender should be given a distance of 120 cm from the next bush, decorative - 30 cm.

Lavender soil

Lavender of all kinds grows best in soil that will meet the following criteria:

Before planting in acidic soil, the site must be neutralized with limestone or wood ash. It is also worth adding compost to the soil to ensure the porosity of its structure and increase the level of nutrients. Soil moisture can also affect lavender cultivation. Wetlands or places where groundwater is high are not suitable for planting this plant.

Where to plant lavender

When choosing "neighbors" of lavender, you need to proceed from a combination of aromas. Some combinations can stand out with a pleasant, unusual smell, while others, on the contrary, will spoil the wonderful aroma of flowers separately. What to plant lavender next to and how does it combine with other flowers? Such questions often arise when planting this shrub, but not everyone finds answers to them.

A good option would be to plant lavender next to catnip and sage. In the spring, lilies of the valley and daffodils will converge well with it, and in the summer - sweet peas, tobacco and mirabilis.

Lavender comes in a wide variety of colors. For example, Centiva Early Lavender and Centiva Blue Lavender are purple, but if the former is more pink, the latter is more blue, and Centiva Silver Lavender is white. This plant looks best with yellow plant colors, such as purple echinacea. But this does not mean that these rules must be strictly observed. By adding fantasy and creativity, you can use other combinations and especially transform the site.

Some care tips for lavender

If the climatic zone of the area in which lavender is grown is very cold, then you should not plant it in the soil. For this, a capsho or flowerpot is suitable, which will be easy to transfer to a warm room with a sharp drop in temperature. It is worth paying attention to feeding the plant.


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