Available Lavender Plants, Wholesale Orders Only

Lavandula x intermedia
Commonly known as lavandin. Lavandin is the name for a variety of lavender that comes from a cross of English and spike lavender. Many of these varieties are highly recommended for producing commercial oil and dried bundles. It is also a very popular garden plant because the oil is of lesser quality that (Angustifolias) due to the presence of high camphor, a white transparent waxy crystalline solid with a pungent odor. The yields from these varieties are up to 10 times more than other varieties. In addition, lavandins are very hardy with a flowering period from early July to late August.

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  • Cathy Blanc - This relatively new variety of lavender is similar to White Spike Lavandin, but actual plants are more compact and the flower petals are a brighter shade of white. The plant normally grows three to four feet tall.
  • Dutch Mill - This variety features long stems and medium blue flowers. It has a strong fragrance and is good for oil production. Its late summer blooms have a strong fragrance. Dutch Mill is wonderful in fresh bouquets because the large, free-forming flower heads really enhance flower arrangements.
  • Fred Boutin - This lightly-compact bush plant has an overall silver-grey look. Fred Boutin is a late blooming plant and contains the most attractive winter foliage of all lavandins. With its long stems, medium purple flowers and excellent smell, it is excellent for landscaping borders.
  • Gros Blue - This new cultivar from France is becoming popular throughout the Pacific Northwest. The plants contain longer flower heads making it excellent for fresh or dried bouquets. Gros Blue has a darker color - almost navy blue - than the popular Grosso variety of lavender.
  • Grosso - Grosso is a commercial, all-purpose plant that is very hardy. Its long stems are excellent for dried bouquets and potpourris. Because Grosso is such a high-yielding plant, it has become the most widely used lavender variety for oil production in the world.
  • Hidcote Giant - This is a distinctive lavandin because of its growing habits and the dense unusually shaped spikes, which are excellent for dried bundles, potpourris and more. This slow-growing variety is very fragrant and features flower heads that are a rich deep lavender-purple in color. Plants are normally between 18" to 24" inches tall.
  • Hidcote Pink - This semi-dwarf variety contains greyer foliage and compact flower heads. This variety has slightly deeper pink flowers than "Jean Davis." Hidcote Pink has a spicy fragrance and grows to be between 20 and 24 inches tall.
  • Jean Davis - This compact plant features dainty pale pink flowers. Jean Davis works well in landscaped areas and features a nice scent. This lavender features an exceptionally fruity taste.
  • Provence - This variety is also known as French lavender and is one of the largest lavandins. Provence features very long, dense and full spikes that are wonderful for fresh bouquets, lavender wands, potpourri and culinary purposes. The aroma is milder and sweeter than other lavenders.
  • Seal - This is one of the largest varieties of lavender. In fact, the plant may grow to almost three feet wide. It is reputed for having a very good scent and is one of the best for making potpourri and fresh bouquets. This variety features fan-like growth of stems. Flowers are a rich mauve and can last up to four months. Seal features an early flowering season.
  • Super -
    This is one of the most elegant lavandins. It is dark green with bright green margins, thick lateral branching all the way up and long or mid to lower and long overall look. The variety features a light and flowery aroma. Super has the best perfume of all lavandins and is mainly used for soap fragrances and aromatherapy because it produces a lot of oil.
  • White Spike - This variety features white, highly fragrant blossoms that are excellent in both fresh and dried arrangements. Plants bloom in mid summer and provide great contrast in landscaped areas. This variety is also excellent for culinary products.
Lavandula Angustifolia
This lavender species is the most recommended and valued of all lavenders because of the high quality oil produced by the plants. The oils can be used in perfume and cosmetics. The species medicinal properties include everything from alleviating stress, headaches and insomnia to reducing fevers. Its flowering period is from mid June to late July.
  • Buena Vista - This slow-growing lavender is excellent for culinary purposes. This lavender variety blooms twice per year - once in the late spring and again in fall in areas with long growing seasons and mild weather. Buena Vista has a strong fragrance, distinctive and very dark blue calyxes and lighter blue flowers.
  • Croxton's Wild - This is a more rare variety that contains a rich fragrance and silver-grey foliage. Croxton's Wild are excellent plants to cut, but are not recommended for drying. During the blooming period, you can expect impressive blue-lavender flowers.
  • Folgate - This English lavender is one of the best oil producers and is considered the best for producing high-yield crops for culinary uses, etc. Folgate is a tiny bush with narrow, small leaves.
  • Hidcote Blue - This lavender is described as a free flowering dwarf variety that produces deep purple spikes in late spring and summer. Hidcote Blue makes a great dwarf hedge or can be used for edging or for creating borders.
  • Lodden Blue - This compact low bush features spreading growth, grey-green foliage and deep violet-blue flowers. This variety is one of the earliest to bloom and originally hails from England. Lodden Blue can be used as an ornamental plant for hedging or cart work.
  • Maillette - This variety's long, thin flower spikes are very fragrant. The variety was introduced by Pierre Grosso, of Grosso Lavender fame, and raised in France for oil production. This variety was introduced in the U.S. around 1981.
  • Martha Roderick - A very sweet fragrance and bright blue flowers in June are traits of this lavender variety. Due to its compact growth with beautiful mounding habits, this plant is an excellent choice for landscaping.
  • Melissa - This variety features tightly compact pink and white spikes that bloom longer than other pink lavender plants. It can be used for ornamental or hedging purposes or for a variety of culinary uses. The plant was introduced by Van Hevelingen Herb Nursery in Oregon.
  • Mitchum Grey - An English lavender with medium-sized deep purple flowers and grey foliage. It is a very attractive lavender plant that is often prized by gardeners for its distinct appearance.
  • Munstead - This is one of the angustifolias that grows well in containers. Munstead is one of the most popular small lavenders to plant in gardens. It is a very fragrant robust lavender that makes a great hedge. It blooms profusely in the spring with dark lavender-blue spikes and is very attractive throughout the year. It is excellent for making potpourris and contains attractive deep blue/purple flowers.
  • Premier - This vigorous strong-growing lavender contains thick bright green foliage and strong flower stems. It has large violet flowers and blooms twice - once in early summer and again in August/September.
  • Royal Purple - This variety was the very first lavender bred by Norfolk Lavender in England and features long stems and long cylindrical flowers. It can be used as a hedge, but needs to be trimmed regularly to maintain a rounded shape. This variety can be used for culinary products.
  • Royal Velvet - This variety is a small to medium-sized plant. It is one of the best Lavandula angustifolias. Its deep purple flowers and foliage are highly aromatic. It is a great oil producer and excellent for culinary uses. Royal Velvet is an all-purpose plant that is one of the best selling lavender plants.
  • Sachet - This variety features open, grey-green foliage and dark violet purple flowers. It produces sweetly fragranced oils that are great for making sachets. It is a wonderful ornamental plant and blooms in June and again in August or September.
  • Sharon Roberts - Sharon Roberts is a medium bushy plant containing green foliage and dark purple/blue flowers. It is suitable for ornamental hedging because it has a long blooming period and strong fragrance. This variety is an excellent choice when making fresh bundles.
  • Susan Belsinger - This lavender variety is sometimes called "Short n' Sweet" because of its small stature. It features short, barrel-shaped flower heads of light violet-blue.
  • Tucker's Early - This variety was introduced by Tom DeBaggio and is a cross between Mitcham Grey and Two Seasons lavender varieties. It features dark flower buds and blue flowers which bloom throughout the summer. It is one of the earliest lavenders to bloom and the last to finish. It makes a great container plant and is highly fragrant.
  • Silver Frost - Named for its incredible powder-white foliage this variety is a slow grower with stout woody branches. It takes between two and three years to begin blooming heavily, but is well worth the wait. Silver Frost features showy blue flowers and is extremely heat tolerant.
Lavandula Stoechas
Known also at topped lavender, Lavandula stocchas is widely used commercially in air fresheners, deodorants, disinfectants and insecticides. Containing narrow, linear, stalkless leaves that are untoothed with rolled margins, Lavandula is covered with a fine grey down that provides an overall grey-green appearance. It contains a fragrance that is between a true lavender scent and a pungent rosemary fragrance.
  • Blue Star (Dark Eyes) - A favorite Spanish lavender variety noted for beautiful grey-green foliage and flower heads that are a dark purple-red color. Nicknamed butterfly lavender, it has a pinecone-shaped bud that emits a eucalyptus fragrance. It blooms continuously from May to October if spent blossoms are removed.
  • Otto Quast - This hardy variety of Spanish lavender is known for its bold, purple-bracketed blooms. Otto Quast blooms from early spring until the first hard freeze. It contains attractive foliage during the winter months than some of the other lavender varieties. It features a softer, yet deeply satisfying fragrance that attracts birds, butterflies and humans.
Harvested Lavender and Supplies
  • Sickle - Order of 6 minimum. This is a commercial Lavender Sickle to harvest your lavender
  • Grosso Bundles - Box of 24 bundles, one box minimum order. Dried and ready to retail.
  • Grosso Loose Lavender - 5 pound minimum order.
  • Sachet Sifter - This tool is used to clean your lavender buds, easy to use and inexpensive. Leaves your lavender 95% clean.
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