Lavender Fresh Farm
Family owned & operated lavender farm in Fresno CA, we offer homemade lavender products at our farm store & online store at www.LavenderFreshFarm.com.
Tours available, email [email protected]. Hours vary, please email or text for information. We are a family owned lavender farm in Fresno, CA. Open every Saturday in June 8am to noon. Please text or call if you would like to visit the farm store.
June 6 come out for U-Pick and a fresh bouquet from Serenity Stems and Treats. We are open until 2 pm Saturday and Sunday 8am to Noon.
06/06/2026
Capture your pet among the beauty of the lavender fields! 💜
Join me at Lavender Fresh Farm on June 19 & 20 for a special lavender-themed photo session with your pet.
🐾 20-minute session
🐾 3 edited digital images
🐾 $125
Book Here: https://simspawtraits.pixieset.com/booking/lavender-minis
06/06/2026
Cookies are back in stock!!
06/04/2026
Great post explaining the difference in the 3 families of lavender. Our farm grows and sells the culinary lavender buds: Munstead, Royal Purple, and Big Time Blue.
Most "lavender" purchased at American garden centers is not the kind recipes call for — and many gardeners never find out until the shortbread tastes medicinal. Three types sit side by side on the same bench looking nearly identical. They are not. 🌿
English lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) — the only one for cooking. Low camphor, clean floral flavor, true lavender scent. Hardy in zones 5–9. Compact plant with short dense flower spikes and no bracts. Varieties worth growing for culinary use: Hidcote, Munstead, Royal Velvet, Folgate.
Spanish lavender (Lavandula stoechas) — immediately identifiable by the two or more large petal-like bracts standing up from the tip of the flower head like rabbit ears. Hardy in zones 7b–10 only. High camphor content makes it harsh for cooking. It thrives in heat and humidity where English lavender struggles, which is why it dominates the Southeast market. Also sold as French lavender, butterfly lavender, or rabbit-ear lavender — do not let the label mislead you.
Lavandin (Lavandula × intermedia) — a sterile hybrid between English lavender and spike lavender. The largest of the three: two to three feet tall, flower spikes on long bare stems, noticeably bigger plant overall. Hardy in zones 5–9. Blooms later than English lavender. Very high camphor and borneol content produces a sharp medicinal flavor — not for cooking. Most of the commercial lavender oil and lavender sachets on the market come from lavandin, not from true lavender. Grosso, Provence, and Phenomenal are all lavandin varieties. 🌱
The identification shortcut: look at the flower head. No bracts and short compact spike = English lavender. Rabbit-ear bracts on top = Spanish lavender. Tall spike on a long bare stem and notably large plant = lavandin.
The tag often says only "lavender." Read the botanical name — Lavandula angustifolia is the one you want for the kitchen.
One tip that protects more plants than zone charts: lavender dies in winter from wet roots, not from cold. Drainage matters more than zone.
06/01/2026
Beautiful day at Lavender Fresh Farm. Don't miss out on Lavender Season - last U-Pick is June 21st. We offer the reservation only Twilight Walks on Friday and Saturday evenings for $25 each. $10 U-Pick on Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Come out soon, before the season ends.
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Address
6790 W McKinley
Fresno, CA
93723
