Lavender Grappenhall

£6.00

A vigorous lavender forming a large, bushy plant with long stems of fragrant lavender-blue flowers through mid to late summer. A bee magnet, ideal for informal hedging in sunny, well-drained soil. Non Members Delivery Notes and charges

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Description

Lavandula ‘Grappenhall’ – lavender

Botanical name: Lavandula x intermedia ‘Grappenhall’
Common names: Lavandin (English hybrid) lavender
Family: Lamiaceae (mint family)
Plant type: Evergreen aromatic sub-shrub
Habit: Compact to bushy, mound-forming
Pot size: 1 litre pot
Eventual size: Approx. 75–90cm tall × 90cm spread
Foliage: Narrow, aromatic silver-grey to grey-green leaves; evergreen
Flowers: Long spikes of pale purple-blue flowers on tall stems, mid to late summer (July–August)
Scent: Strongly aromatic foliage and flowers
Aspect / light: Full sun
Soil: Sharply drained; poor to average; tolerates lime; dislikes wet; any pH
Hardiness: RHS H5 (hardy, to about −15°C); USDA zones 6–9
Exposure: Open, hot, dry, sunny
Native range: Garden form; the genus is native to the Mediterranean
Toxicity / pet & child safety: Generally considered non-toxic to people and pets

Lavandula ‘Grappenhall’ is a large, vigorous lavandin lavender with long stems of pale purple-blue flowers and highly aromatic grey-green foliage. Superb as a big, fragrant specimen or informal hedge.

GardenAdvice notes

A classic evergreen aromatic sub-shrub, lavender is loved for its fragrant silver foliage and its fragrant summer flower spikes, which hum with bees. Lavandin (English hybrid) lavender is prized for its scent, its drought tolerance and its beautiful silvery presence, and is a mainstay of sunny borders, edging, low hedging and Mediterranean-style plantings.

Growing & planting

Plant in spring in sharply drained, poor to average soil in full sun — lavender demands sun and good drainage, and dislikes rich, wet, heavy ground, which shortens its life. It tolerates lime and drought. Ideal for edging, low hedges, gravel and sunny borders. Improve heavy soil with grit. Space appropriately for its size.

Care & maintenance

The key task is annual pruning: after flowering (or in early spring), trim the plant back into a neat mound, cutting back the flower stems and about 2–3cm of the current year’s leafy growth — but never cut back into the old, bare, woody stems, as lavender will not reshoot from bare wood. This yearly trim is what keeps plants compact, bushy and long-lived rather than woody and sprawling. It is drought-tolerant once established.

Propagation

  • Cuttings: Take semi-ripe cuttings in summer, which root readily.

Pests & diseases

Generally trouble-free in a sunny, well-drained spot. Its main enemy is wet, heavy soil, which causes rot and short life. Rosemary beetle and froghoppers (‘cuckoo spit’) may occasionally appear. Old, unpruned plants go woody and bare at the base.

Uses in the garden

Superb for edging paths and borders, low fragrant hedging, gravel and Mediterranean-style gardens, sunny borders and containers, and for cutting and drying; wonderful lining a path where you brush past the scent.

Wildlife value

Lavender is one of the very best plants for pollinators: the fragrant flower spikes are hugely attractive to bees, butterflies and other beneficial insects throughout summer.

Toxicity & safety

Lavender is generally regarded as non-toxic to people and pets.

GardenAdvice tip

‘Grappenhall’ is one of the larger, more vigorous lavenders, so give it room — it makes a big, billowing, richly fragrant mound rather than a neat little edging plant. Like all lavenders, the secret to keeping it good for years is that annual after-flowering trim into a tidy dome, always stopping short of the bare old wood, which won’t reshoot.

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