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Purple flower spikes of Fern-leaf lavender (Lavandula multifida) with delicate foliage
Lamiaceae10 April 202612 min

Fern-leaf Lavender: complete guide

Lavandula multifida

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Overview

Fern-leaf Lavender (Lavandula multifida), also called cut-leaf lavender or summer lavender, is a rare, exotic lavender species from southern Portugal, North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean. This is not a hardy plant like English Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), but a more delicate, frost-tender variant primarily used in milder climates or as a container plant. What makes it exceptional, however, are its extraordinary, exotically fringed flower spikes and ultra-fine, almost fern-like foliage.

Fern-leaf lavender grows to approximately 45–60 cm tall and wide, with a loose, informal growth habit quite different from the tight dome-shape of English lavender. Flowers appear from May through September in long, elegantly fringed spikes that look much lighter and more open than other lavender species. The foliage is far finer than common lavender - almost fern-like - giving the plant a unique, refined appearance.

With gardenworld.app you can create a Mediterranean container garden where fern-leaf lavender serves as accent plant in pots and troughs among rosemary and oleander. It is also suitable for warm, sheltered locations in warmer parts of temperate regions.

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