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SEQUIM — Here are 18 farms in the Sequim area for the 2023 Lavender Weekend, which will be Friday through Sunday. Farms are open now for visitors, but many will have special hours and events during ...
Absent this year during Sequim Lavender Weekend was the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s show, and a handful of farms that either ...
For Sequim Lavender Weekend, Purple Haze Lavender Farm, 180 Bell Bottom Lane, charges $5 admission per day, and Jardin du Soleil Lavender Farm, 3832 Sequim-Dungeness Way, $10 for all three days, with ...
SEQUIM — Lavender season is upon Sequim. Most farms are open now, with festivities beginning at one farm this weekend — Washington Lavender Farm’s two-week festival that begins today and extends ...
Wisconsin, United States Fragrant Isle Lavender Farm in Wisconsin is the Midwest’s largest, and owners Edgar and Martine Anderson have a mission to educate the public about lavender. This photo, ...
With its Mediterranean-like climate and lavender farms, the Sequim-Dungeness Valley has become America's Provence. Accessibility statement Skip to main content Democracy Dies in Darkness ...
The Sequim Lavender Festival weekend starts Friday, July 15, and runs through Sunday, July 17. It’s important to note that some farms charge admission during the festival. KING 5's Evening ...
At Victor's Lavender Farm, my nose was inches from its target, a cluster of purple buds as fragrant as a French perfumery, when a commanding voice called out from behind the planters.
Purple Haze Lavender Farm in Sequim was one of the area’s first to open in the 1990s, when leaders decided to focus on growing the plant to attract tourists.
Because it's the driest place in notoriously rainy western Washington, the coastal city of Sequim (pronounced squim) doesn't look like the rest of the Olympic Peninsula. The first thing you'll ...
Sequim offers a mix of pleasant weather and waterside retreats surrounded by the Strait of Juan de Fuca, ... Between 1996 and today, dozens of lavender farms and businesses opened in the valley.
At Victor’s Lavender Farm, my nose was inches from its target, a cluster of purple buds as fragrant as a French perfumery, when a commanding voice called out from behind the planters.“Not ...