July/August 1980
By the Mother Earth News editors
Lately, more and more people have begun to understand just how limited in both variety and nutritional value our "modern" diets have become. This realization has sparked a new and widespread interest in the culinary and therapeutic uses of herbs . . . chose plants which although not well Snown today were, just one short generation a go, honored "guests" on the dinner tables and in the medicine chests of our grandparents' homes. In this regular feature, MOTHER examines the availability, cultivation, and benefits of our "forgotten" vegetable foods and rem edies . . . and we hope, helps pre vent the loss of still another bit of an cestral lore.
If there's a single, pervasive reason why you should make lavender a part of your landscape, it is of course the plant's famous fragrance.
This ancient and aromatic herb once adorned the sacrificial altars of early Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. (Virgil praised the honey of bees that fed on its sweetness . . . and the Romans were so fond of using its flowers in their perfumes, soaps, and baths that the name lavender was derived from the Latin verb lavare, meaning "to wash".)
Years later, France's Charles VI reclined on lavender filled satin cushions . . . Queen Elizabeth I was particularly fond of "lavender conserves" . . . and in 1895 it was reported that Queen Victoria's royal residences "are thoroughly impregnated with the refreshing odour of this old fashioned flower, and there is no perfume that the Queen likes better".
A WIDE SELECTION
There are 28 different species of lavender, and many separate varieties among these. The hardiest and sweetest smelling type is Lav andula vera, better known as "English" or "true" lavender. Also very popular is Lavandula s pica, or "spike" lavender . . . a plant which has broader leaves that contain more oil than do those of L. vera, although its flowers are somewhat less fragrant. (Both varieties are frequently grouped under the more general name of Lavandula officinalis.)
Though you can grow this herb from seed, its slow germination and low survival rate will try the patience of average gardeners, so it's generally best to start with nursery plants or to take cuttings from a friend's garden.