Friday, August 12, 2022 CapitalPress.com VICTOR’S LAVENDER Expert supplies greenhouses worldwide Don't Miss Another Issue! By DIANNA TROYER For the Capital Press SEQUIM, Wash. — Victor Gonzalez has no trade secrets about growing lavender, his life’s mission. Nicknamed the “Grandfather of Laven- der,” Gonzalez raises lavender near Sequim, Wash., on the Olympic Peninsula in an unusual microclimate. A wholesale producer, he and his staff prop- agate 500,000 seedlings of 100 lavender variet- ies to supply an increasing demand from green- houses worldwide. “I love to grow lavender and help others so they won’t have the failures I had in the begin- ning,” said Gonzalez, 52, a U.S. Agency for International Development volunteer with nearly three decades of lavender expertise. “That’s who I am,” he said. “Having a giving attitude has taken me to Latin America, North Africa, and the Middle East to off er farmers advice. It’s working for me. I will keep it that way.” He teaches classes about raising the fragrant shrub, has contributed to a book, does consult- ing, and launched a website, victorslavender. com with instructional DVDs about propagat- ing and planting the fragrant shrub. For centuries worldwide, lavender has been prized for cooking, fl oral arrangements, its calming aroma, and as an ingredient in health and beauty products. Studies suggest lavender benefi ts those with depression, insomnia and anxiety, and that its oil has antiseptic and anti-in- fl ammatory properties. A hardy, pest-resistant perennial shrub, lav- ender requires minimal watering and fertiliza- tion. It thrives in full sun and well-drained soil. To share his love of lavender, Gonzalez’s Victor’s Lavender Victor Gonzalez with his lavender crop on his small farm near Sequim, Wash. He propagates 500,000 seedlings of 100 lavender varieties to supply the growing demand from greenhouses worldwide. farm includes greenhouses, fi elds with a U-cut section, and a retail store with health and beauty products made by his wife, Maribel. Gonzalez cultivates two acres and leases two acres. He also oversees four greenhouses on his farm and leases another three around town. “The greenhouses are the heart of my farm,” he said. “We’re known in the industry for off er- ing quality plants and customer service — the whole package.” Gonzalez learned to grow lavender in the mid-1990s, when the owner of a farm where he worked near Sequim wanted to try a new crop and asked him to raise lavender. Having never grown it, he followed advice in a book and watched the plants die. In hind- sight, he applied too much water and fertilizer. “I decided to raise it based on my knowledge of soil types and growing crops in my family’s farm in Mexico,” he said. W ATER M ASTER S ERIES AND • In-Depth Ag News • Ag Success Stories • Full Website Access • Innova�ons & Regulations • Classified Ads & Auctions • E-edition, Apps, & Newsletters 1-Year Subscrip�on for only $39 E VERGREEN S UPERIOR S ERVICE & D ESIGN • All your needs for irrigation parts service • We build custom equipment for your special needs. • Hose replacements & fusion repairs • Transport Tanks • Rental Returns & Used Equipment • • Structural Structural and and steel steel available available for for purchase. purchase. Subscribe Today! Truck Equipment 10910 Portland Rd. NE • Brooks, OR Call: 503-792-3739 • Fax: 503-792-3738 S272451-1 • Full Service • Alterations • Dump bodies • Hoists • Farmbeds • Flatbeds Pay online using promo code TRUST 800-882-6789 • CapitalPress.com 7