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The
Local Lavender project
The award-winning Local Lavender project aims to
revive the once famous lavender fields of the Carshalton area of
London, the “lavender capital of the world” around 1900.
The area helped companies such as Yardley build an international
reputation in perfumery and bath luxuries.
Around 1900, blue fields of Lavender could be seen all over Wallington,
Carshalton, Waddon and Sutton. Lavender was used for scented bags,
floor and furniture washes, as a disinfectant, to preserve linen
from moths, and for remedies. Lavender was also used in recipes
such as lavender jam, honey and custard.
The harvest has been a popular attraction since 1999 with the flower
crop growing larger every year. In 2001 an ingenious harvesting
solution was found in the form of a small scale “Heritage
Harvester”. The fabulous contraption was custom built from
scrap and recycled materials by an engineering team from Cranfield
University, led by Dr James Brighton, consultant engineer to Channel
4’s "Scrap-heap Challenge” and “Junkyard
Wars". The Heritage Harvester was specially designed to harvest
narrow rows of lavender without damaging the plants, and demonstrates
good re-use of materials from second-hand agricultural machines,
a rotator and a quad bike.
The harvested lavender is distilled into pure essential oil that
can be used for aromatherapy or relaxing scents.
The Lavender project has its roots in a long-term collaboration
with local prison HMP Downview. Cuttings of the traditional varieties
of the area were collected from the public and grown in an ambitious
horticulture project within the prison, providing prisoners with
useful skills. Once ready for planting, after two or three years,
prisoners on day-release helped BioRegional staff clear and plant
up disused allotments.
Last updated 14th January 2008
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