'Regal Splendour' Lavender Plants

Lavandula stoechas Regal Splendour

£3.69 - £5.99

Rich Wine-Purple French Butterfly Lavender

  • Early Flowering
  • Deep blue-purple flowers with dusky purple ears
  • Height: 70cm
  • Scent: Strong lavender scent
  • Flowering: May to July/August
  • Evergreen, grey-green aromatic foliage
  • Drought resistant, grows on the coast
  • Lavandula stoechas
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators
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Potted / P9 (9cm Pot)
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About This Product

Most Poplular Purple French Butterfly Lavender

Latin Name: Lavandula stoechas 'Regal Splendour'

Small, dark purple flowers held on elegant, slender stems and topped with exceptionally showy lilac-purple ‘wings’.

The grey-green evergreen foliage is strongly scented, and the plants themselves are quite compact compared to our other lavender varieties, up to around 60cm tall and wide, with flower spikes reaching up to a metre.

French lavender blooms earlier than its "English" angustifolia relatives, sometimes starting in May: if you deadhead it a little, you can extend its flowering into August, but June & July are its peak season.

Features

  • Early Flowering
  • Deep blue-purple flowers with dusky purple ears
  • Height: 70cm
  • Scent: Strong lavender scent
  • Flowering: May to July/August
  • Evergreen, grey-green aromatic foliage
  • Drought resistant, grows on the coast
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators

Growing French Lavender

The RHS give it a hardiness rating of H4, the most tricky rating, meaning it will withstand an "average winter" down to around -5C without much damage.
Ideally, it wants a sheltered, sunny spot against a south-facing wall in most of the country outside the South West. In colder inland and Northern regions, we recommend growing it in pots that can either be moved into shelter in winter, or that receive heat from the house and can be covered up to make a cosy microclimate. For protection in the garden, horticultural fleece is good for rows, and buckets with ventilation holes in them, or large pots, should work for covering single plants.

Plant in sharply drained soil and full sun. If your soil’s heavy, dig in lots of grit and make a ridge or raised bed, or save yourself the trouble and grow it in pots.
Prune immediately after flowering.

Planting Companions for Regal Splendour Lavender

A group of Lavenders in terracotta pots of varying heights around a seated area has a simple and effective rhythm. It’s a classic path edging plant, where every time you brush past you’ll release a heavenly waft of perfume.

Combine it in sunny borders with other Mediterranean sun lovers such as thymes, rosemary, santolina, stachys and other later-flowering varieties of lavender, both purple and white, which will prolong the lavender season in your garden. It grey-green foliage will blend marvellously in a gravel garden.