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Arctic Snow Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) Img 1Arctic Snow Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) Img 1Arctic Snow Lavender in 9cm pot

Arctic Snow Lavender Plants

Lavandula angustifolia 'Arctic Snow'Feefo logo

The details

Lavandula angustifolia

  • Use: Low hedging / edging, basic topiary balls & shapes
  • Flowers: White spikes 
  • Flowering: July to September
  • Scent: Strong, lavender
  • Leaves: Evergreen, aromatic. Grey-green when mature
  • Height x Spread: 50cm x 50cm
  • Unappealing to deer, rodents
  • Drought tolerant when established
  • Culinary herb
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators
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Description

Lavandula angustifolia 'Arctic Snow': Dwarf White English Lavender Plants

Arctic Snow is a slow-growing white English lavender, making a lovely low ornamental hedge to about 50cm. This hardy evergreen has fragrant, silver-grey leaves topped in late summer with 25cm tall flowering spikes, covered in richly perfumed pure-white flowers. 

For a bigger white flowering lavender bush, try the Lavandin Edeweiss
Snowman is a Butterfly Lavender, so it's less hardy, but is close to the same size.
Browse all our varieties of lavender.

Delivery season is weather dependent. There is no point planting lavender out before nighttime temperatures rise as the shock sets it back, so it establishes slower than lavender planted later when the soil is warm.

  • We aim to ship the larger pot sizes from the end of April, but cold weather can delay delivery into May. 

Choosing a size:

  • For window boxes and other containers, start with the smallest plants, which come in P9 pots and are a year old. If you plant them outside, do it from the end of May when the soil is nice and warm. They are also the cheapest way to start a lavender hedge, you only have to wait a year or two longer for them to knit together.
  • For quick borders, hedges and edges, or simply specimen shrubs that provide "instant" impact, larger plants in 2 litre pots are ideal. You get more root and more flower in the first year, and they do not look lost planted at one plant every 13" (33cm). By the end of the first summer, they will have joined up.

Features

  • Use: Low hedging / edging, basic topiary balls & shapes
  • Flowers: White spikes 
  • Flowering: July to September
  • Scent: Strong, lavender
  • Leaves: Evergreen, aromatic. Grey-green when mature
  • Height x Spread: 50cm x 50cm
  • Unappealing to deer, rodents
  • Drought tolerant when established
  • Culinary herb
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators

Growing Arctic Snow Lavender

  • Aspect: Full sun, South facing 
  • Soil: Well drained is vital, poorly fertile is preferable
  • Soil pH: Above 6.5 is best. Likes chalk
  • Hardiness Rating: H5 (to -15C)
  • Suitable for the coast and windy locations
  • Ideal for container growing

Lavender must have good drainage and close to full sun. It prefers poor soil and thrives in exposed coastal sites.
When established, they are drought-tolerant, but in their first and second year you must water them well, as with any new shrub.

Don't plant lavender out too early in Spring: the cold soil will shock it and set it back. In most years, this means waiting until May.  

There are different approaches to pruning, which is necessary to keep your lavender dense and beautiful.
The essential thing is to cut all the new, green growth down to two or three buds typically in early September, around when the last flowers have faded.
A light trim in Spring is optional, but recommended.  

Spacing an Arctic Snow Lavender hedge: Like most formal hedging, plant at 3 per metre, 33cm apart in a single row.

Deer and rodents are not interested in lavender - they might nibble fresh green Spring growth to test it, but as the foliage matures they ignore it.

In Your Garden Design

Lavender really shines as a hedge that you can brush past to release the rich, lingering perfume, evocative of sizzling holidays in the South of France. Plant it either side of a path, where it will soften the edges dreamily with its billowing spikes of scented flowers.
It works well as an alternative to box in a knot garden or parterre, enclosing a vegetable patch, spring bulbs, summer roses or any other perennial planting combination. Use alongside the more traditional rich purple varieties of lavender for a pretty juxtaposition; or plant alongside hardy geraniums, phlox, gaura, penstemons, valerian and lupins to create a heavenly cottage-garden look.

Did You Know?

British bred variety.

Planting Instructions

Read our full guide on how to grow lavender, with a quick pruning video.

  • Good drainage is most important: Lavender tolerates cold weather, but it hates "wet feet" in winter.
  • Heavy clay on a dry, sunny hill that sheds water should be fine, but light, dry, poorly fertile soils are ideal.
  • If your site is not well drained, lavender thrives in pots.
  • It needs plenty of sun to flower well.
  • It can grow near the sea, good for windy sites.
  • It's drought resistant after it has established deep roots, which takes a couple of years.

Prepare the Soil Before Planting

  • The key is to remove weeds and to break up soil compaction, so the new roots can spread out rapidly downwards and sideways.
  • Don't enrich the soil, only use Rootgrow mycorrhizae at planting time.  
  • To improve drainage, it helps to raise the soil level a little by forking in plenty of grit and sharp sand, however, this is not usually practical beyond a small ridge or mound: growing Lavender in a pot is much easier than raising the level of a whole bed! 

Care for Your New Lavender Hedge

  1. Most important: water thoroughly in dry weather for the first growing season. Soak the ground, and then let the soil almost dry out before watering again. 
  2. Second most important: weed around the plants.

After the first growing season, lavender in most gardens should never need watering again.
If your soil is very dry and sandy, then continue to water in dry weather at the start of their second growing season.

Even with the best care, all lavender hedging tends to go woody and floppy after 10-15 years, losing its full appeal. When you see this happening, take cuttings to replace the old hedge, or order new ones from us. 

Trimming Lavender Plants

A hard trim every year in late autumn ensures dense growth, more flowers, and extends Lavender's ornamental life span.
Cut back each stem to about two buds / 2cm of green growth. 

  • Avoid cutting into the older, woody part of the stems: if you prune yearly, you should never need to do this.

Deadhead flowers regularly to encourage more - it's up to you to decide whether to leave the last blooms on the plants overwinter.

Hygiene & Diseases

Lavender is very disease resistant, and diseases are typically indicators that the site is too damp and/or shady for Lavender to thrive.

  • Prune off Dead, Damaged or Diseased (DDD) wood as soon as it appears.
  • Disinfect your pruning tools between every cut if there are signs of disease.
  • Disposing of diseased material is safer than composting it.
  • Clean out Autumn leaves from underneath your plants, which can trap damp.