There's good reason why lavender remains a garden favourite across Britain.

Its vivid green leaves and purple flowers stay bright and aromatic throughout summer, before taking on a silvery hue when colder weather arrives.

Come September, most English lavenders will have completed their primary flowering period, with flower spikes turning brown as the plants settle into compact mounds of grey-green foliage.

This is precisely when the stems become firm at their base whilst remaining flexible at the tips.

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Gardening guru Adam Kirtland, recognised online as 'View From The Potting Bench,' suggests this is the perfect moment to transform regular pruning into immediate propagation, ensuring ever

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