Announcing Our Long-Blooming Lavender Collection
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Nov 16, 2016 · Revised on Oct 9, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Nov 16, 2016 · Revised on Oct 9, 2025
by David Salman
The genus Lavandula (Lavender) is of huge horticultural importance. And this is especially true in the waterwise (xeric) landscape where these plants take center stage because they are resilient, low-water evergreen shrubs. In the garden they resist browsing animals because of the aromatic oils in the leaves and flowers. They feed a wide array of pollinators with their nectar-rich flowers. Lavender can delight, feed and relax humans with the aromatic oils contained in the leaves and flowers. Indeed, Lavandula has been associated with mankind since Roman times.
There are 39 recognized species in the genus Lavandula all of which hale from the Old World, spanning a huge area from the Canary Islands across the Mediterranean into southwestern Asia. However, horticulturally, there are three primary groups that provide us with the vast majority of cultivated varieties: English lavender, French hybrid lavender and Spanish lavender. English Lavender is the most cold hardy while cold tender Spanish lavender is best for hotter, more humid mild winter regions. French hybrids types fall into the middle for cold tolerance and are the largest growing of the lavenders, most commonly used for cooking and lavender crafting (wreaths, wands, sachets).
In the garden, the key to successful cultivation of Lavender is to provide them with:
To introduce waterwise gardeners to this indispensable group of culinary/ornamental herbs, we have put together a long-blooming, cold-hardy collection of Lavender varieties that will provide flowers from late spring into early fall. This collection includes a wonderful mix of English and French hybrids that have a variety of flower colors and a range of mature plant sizes. The collection includes one plant each of the following cultivars:
Text by Founder and Chief Horticulturist David Salman.
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