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Lavender Farm Faire

Articles: Lavender Farm Faire
Olympic Lavender Farm offers a selection of certified organic lavender varieties. Photo: Linda Popovich
Olympic Lavender Farm offers a selection of certified organic lavender varieties. Photo: Linda Popovich

In summer, as you enter the small town of Sequim, Washington, on State Highway 101, you’ll see an amazing vista of purple lavender fields shimmering in the warm, gentle breeze that floats up the Sequim-Dungeness Valley. Lower your windows and the heady, fragrant aroma of lavender soon fills the entire car.

Situated at the northern tip of the Olympic Peninsula, the small farming town of Sequim (pronounced “skwim”), population 6,600, is known as the Lavender Capital of North America—and for good reason. With 30 lavender farms covering 50 acres of purple bloom, and growing 160,000 plants, Sequim has become a worldwide destination for lavender lovers.

How did Sequim acquire its reputation as a lavender town? First, there had to be a terroir suitable for growing the hardy purple plant. The town’s unique coastal geography and soil conditions creates a pocket of sunshine, a microclimate similar to that of Provence—southern France’s lavender haven—and has proved ideal for growing this scented, sun-loving plant.

Port Williams Lavender field with bee hives. Photo: Linda Popovich
Port Williams Lavender field with bee hives. Photo: Linda Popovich

In 1995, a few Sequim farmers began growing lavender to save local farmland from urban development. They experimented with lavender products, creating lavender soaps, candles, bundles, oil, sachets, herbs, salt and pepper, vinegar, biscuits, cheesecake, ice cream, espresso, chocolate, iced tea, honey, chutney, beauty products—anything that could possibly be infused with the fragrant herb. Farmers brought their goods to the town’s Open Aire Market, products flew off the shelves, and the rest is history—lavender farms sprouted like mushrooms up and down the valley.

Today, to celebrate its lavender culture, the Sequim Lavender Farmers Association hosts the ultimate lavender bash, an annual Lavender Farm Faire, held the third weekend in July. Attracting thousands of people from around Washington, the United States, and other countries, lavender lovers tour local farms and revel in all things lavender. This year’s Heritage Lavender Farm Tour includes Lost Mountain Lavender Farm, Purple Haze Lavender Farm, Jardin du Soleil Lavender Farm, Olympic Lavender Farm, Washington Lavender, and Victor’s Lavender Farm and Nursery.

Purple Haze Lavender Farm and Store is full of lavender lovers even in the rain. Photo: Linda Popovich
Purple Haze Lavender Farm and Store is full of lavender lovers even in the rain. Photo: Linda Popovich

While the farms vary widely—differing in location, size, layout, and the particular type of lavender cultivated—the settings for all are beautiful. Some are tucked in small green valleys with old wooden sheds and picket fences. Immaculately maintained cabins and houses look out over some farms, surrounded by tall willows and cedars. The occasional piece of rusted farm equipment stands among the tall, purple lavender plants.

Each farm hosts a festive mini-fair with entertainment, food booths, and activities ranging from cooking demonstrations (using lavender, of course), arts, crafts, and jewelry, wine tasting, coffee and tea patios, and live music. Experts offer talks on cultivating and harvesting lavender, how to use lavender for good health, how to craft lavender bundles, lavender identification contests, and more.

Visitors wander rows of lavender at Olympic Lavender Farm against the backdrop of the Olympic Mountains. Photo: Linda Popovich
Visitors wander rows of lavender at Olympic Lavender Farm against the backdrop of the Olympic Mountains. Photo: Linda Popovich

With a gorgeous panoramic backdrop of the majestic Olympic Mountain range, Olympic Lavender Farm is one of the most scenic and is renowned for its many varieties of lavender plants. Owners Mary Borland-Liebsch and her husband cultivate five acres planted in 20 varieties of organic lavender. Married early in 2010, Bruce, a retired law enforcement officer, donned his gardening gloves and started learning. He soon discovered that lavender comes in different colors, including pink and white, and has many uses.

“When we first started this we had no idea what we were getting ourselves into. I went into town to listen to someone talk about planting lavender and came back and told my husband, ‘Honey, we’re going to grow lavender,’ ” says Mary. “It just snowballed from there into what it is today. It’s become a year-round job doing one thing or other: making products, cutting lavender, distilling, working in the field—it’s turned into a full time job and we love it.” She adds, “We are only open in the summer and we enjoy meeting people who come here from all over the world, including the UK.”

Vintage farm equipment adds to the scenery in the fields at Cedarbrook Lavender and Herb Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich
Vintage farm equipment adds to the scenery in the fields at Cedarbrook Lavender and Herb Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich

Cedarbrook Lavender and Herb Farm was the first herb farm in Washington State. Nestled comfortably at the base of Bell Hill, the picturesque plot contains 70 different varieties of the purple plant, 200 herbs and perennials, and a gift shop in the 100-year-old historic Bell farmhouse.  Marcella and Gary Stachurski have been running Cedarbrook farm since 2005. “Lavender found us, enticed us. We knew we did not want to be in a mall. We wanted to be outside and have a specialty plant nursery,” says Marcella. “We love working with the lavender; my favorite is ‘Royal Velvet’, because it still looks pretty in the winter.”

The Stachurskis offer two rental vacation homes on site year-round, and run a Garden Café in summer. As you might expect, the menu is infused with plenty of lavender from their farm: cranberry lavender spritzer, lavender vinaigrette, chocolate mint lavender tea, chamomile peppermint and lavender tea, pure lavender tea—plus lamb burgers, sirloin burgers, portabella mushroom sandwiches, and herbed chicken salad using herbes de Provence. And lavender desserts.

A field of lavender welcomes visitors to Washington Lavender Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich
A field of lavender welcomes visitors to Washington Lavender Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich

At Washington Lavender, a stately 1200-foot-long gravel driveway divides 10.5 acres of lavender plants growing in long rows. For a unique experience, stay at the on-site George Washington Inn, an external replica of American president George Washington’s Mount Vernon home in Virginia, where high tea is served on an open patio overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca, accompanied by fiddlers. Here’s your chance to see if Americans can do a proper job of that most British of traditions while taking in sights you might find in southern France.

Bouquets of lavender are available for purchase at the Lavender Arts and Crafts Faire in Sequim, Washington. Photo: Linda Popovich
Bouquets of lavender are available for purchase at the Lavender Arts and Crafts Faire in Sequim, Washington. Photo: Linda Popovich

Sequim Lavender Farm Faire
July 19-21, 2013

Throughout the weekend you’ll find the Lavender Arts and Crafts Faire downtown in Carrie Blake Park—a festival of music, arts and crafts, food, and family activities.

Jardin du Soleil Lavender Farm https://jardindusoleil.com

Lost Mountain Lavender Farm https://www.lostmountainlavender.com

Olympic Lavender Farm https://www.olympiclavender.com

Purple Haze Lavender Farm https://www.purplehazelavender.com

Victor’s Lavender https://victorslavender.com

Washington Lavender https://www.walavender.com

Ticket information and details at www.sequimlavenderfarmersassociation.org.

Red poppies blooming alongside rows of lavender at Purple Haze Lavender Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich
Red poppies blooming alongside rows of lavender at Purple Haze Lavender Farm. Photo: Linda Popovich

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