Lavender love

I have to admit that I really don’t want to cut the last of my lavender. It is so spectacularly beautiful and the honey bees are buzzing and gathering lavender nectar in the most amazing way. I don’t want it to end! I’ve collected 45 bundles of Lavender today from my largest patch and it still isn’t fully picked-off.

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Hemaris thysbe, commonly known as the hummingbird clearwing (moth)

Break time now and then these bundles along with the other 15 already in the drying room will need to be strung and hung upside-down and left to dry. However before I hang the freshly cut lavender I think I will have to take down some more of the dry bundles and strip them of their buds as I’ve not enough room for the new cut! IMG_2718IMG_2720IMG_1007IMG_2716


Harvesting and drying Lavender

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I’ve been cutting lavender almost each day since July 23.

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Lavender in “the secret garden”

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Since I’m not using my lavender for crafts and bouquets, I wait until the blossoms are generously open on each plant before harvesting.
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Carefully working alongside the buzz of the honey bees, that are very gentle,  I respect their work while cutting. This is a later blooming lavender that will be ready to harvest later this week and into next.

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Lavender is very hardy. I grab a bunch at a time and cut towards the end of the stem and into the green.

Never cut into the woody part of your plant as lavender is unlikely to grow from below the cut if you do.

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Once I have a bundle – as much as I can hold in one handful – I wrap an elastic around the stems to hold it together. Elastic works best as the stems will shrink during drying and the elastic continues to contract to hold the bundle together.

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I work across the top of each plant giving it a much-needed haircut until the plant is stripped clean of flowers.

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Bundles of freshly cut lavender from inside the secret garden.

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Back to the drying room where I tie a piece of string around each bundle and thread those onto a long pole that hang from the ceiling. During the days I open the doors to get good air circulation through the drying room. Depending on the weather, humidity, etc., the lavender takes about week – 10 days to begin to feel dry to the touch and the lavender buds separate easily from the stem.


Lavender in the Garden

Lavender Hill is aptly named for its near 180 lavender plants.

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Although July is harvest-time, throughout the year – even in winter before the snow covers the plants – you can catch the scent of lavender on the breeze – it is heavenly!

freshly cut lavender from Lavender Hill

Freshly cut Lavender is bundled and left to hang to dry for about a week to dryFreshly cut Lavender is bundled and hung upside down and left to dry…then I harvest the dried flowers for use in Lavender Products

The aroma from these lavender buds is heavenly!

The aroma from these lavender buds is heavenly!

 


The Greenhouse Planting

How to plant a greenhouse.

  1. Firstly, begin with a pile of dirt and a second hand greenhouse.
  2. Next look around your garden for 4×4 x16′-long posts and cut to fit under the greenhouse perimeter.
  3. Now the tricky bit: How to move the greenhouse from the grass onto the foundation without anyone to assist?
    1. I shimmied the greenhouse onto 2 pieces of wood. This made sliding it forward much easier than trying to slide it across the grass. I slid it until it was aligned beside the prepared foundation.
    2. Next I placed another piece of wood on top of the foundation and perpendicular to the 2 pieces of wood currently under the greenhouse.
    3. Next I was able to lift the greenhouse (it’s was very light) onto the perpendicular piece of wood and then slide it sideways onto the the foundation continuing to push and slide until the greenhouse was sitting squarely on the foundation.
  4. Next remove the centre piece of wood and screwed/bolt the base of the greenhouse into the wood foundation.
  5. Presto! It looks like it has always been there!

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