To please you and the bees.
Includes: Agastache 'Golden Jubilee', Heliotrope 'Marine', Sweet Pea 'Mammoth Crimson', Camassia leichtlinii, Euphorbia mellifera, Lavandula angustifolia, Nicotiana lime green Matthiola arborescens Alba, Oenothera 'Apricot Delight' and Paradisia lusitanica.
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The most commonly-grown lavender will produce long-stemmed, bright blue flowers which are ideal for cutting, drying or to perfume linen, both the flowers and foliage being strongly-perfumed. Long-lived and easy-to-grow, it benefits from a close haircut early each spring to encourage fresh growth.
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Family: Labiatae
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Common name: Hidcote Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia syn. L. spica)
This is probably the finest form of this lovely lavender which makes compact bushes of narrow, fragrant, grey-green leaves on dense spikes of strongly perfumed blue flowers. Superb, whether as a dwarf shrub in the garden, as a cut flower, or even when dried for making a pot pourri.
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A smart, compact, form of English lavender that carries masses of deep purple-blue flowers on fine, silvery-grey, aromatic foliage. It is the perfect choice for creating a traditional Lavender hedge with the added benefit of being very attractive to bees and butterflies. Fully hardy, the fragrant stems and flowers can also be cut and dried for home-made potpourri.
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Family: Labiatae
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Common name: Lavandula angustifolia nana, Lavender
This amazingly dwarf lavender has short-stemmed fragrant blue flowers studding a medicine ball-sized silver-grey bush. Ideal for a small rock garden or even for formal edging, the odd seedling may vary but most will be very compact indeed.
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