
Want free lavender plants? How to take cuttings in 5 steps & fill your garden with flowers & fragrance in a few weeks
Well, luckily for you, a gardening guru has shared how to take
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Do you want a garden that's full of stunning lavender? Well, you've come to the right place and will need to follow these five simple steps
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Simon Akeroyd has shared a step-by-step tutorial to ensure lavender blooms in your garden
Credit: Facebook/Simon Akeroyd
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First, you'll need to cut non-flowering shoots and strip the leaves
Credit: Facebook/Simon Akeroyd
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Next, you can grab some pots and gritty compost, and insert your cuttings around the edge
Credit: Getty
Thanks to these five quick and easy steps, you'll be able to fill your
Posting on social media, Simon Akeroyd, a gardening enthusiast from the UK, shared
Sharing his top tips online, Simon confirmed that there's no time like the present to get started, as now is the best time to propagate
First things first, you'll need to look and cut for non-flowering young shoots which are turning woody at the base.
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Once you've cut these shoots, the second step is to strip the lower leaves and cut just below a bud at the base.
It's important that you take a few cuttings, as this will increase your success rate.
For the third step, you'll need to grab some pots and gritty compost, and insert your cuttings around the edge.
According to Simon, after just 'a few weeks,' your lavender 'will have started to grow.'
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Once each cutting has formed roots, you can then move onto the fourth step, which involves potting them individually.
With Simon's fifth step, it's very important that you keep the lavender plants well watered.
Cheap and easy ways to transform your garden including painting fences black
After following these steps, Simon confirmed: 'Next year they will become beautiful flowering lavenders.'
Simon's Facebook reel has clearly impressed many, as it has quickly racked up 50,000 views, 1,800 likes and 52 comments.
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Gardening tips and hacks
How to transform your garden on a
How to preserve your favourite flowers at home -
Which plants should I be
When is the
When should I start
How
What colour of
Will my
Beginner
One person said: 'Thank you so much.'
Thank you for showing an ignoramus like me how to do something good in the garden
Facebook user
Another added: 'We have a lavender hedge in our front
A third commented: 'Thank you. Going to try this.'
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Meanwhile, someone else beamed: 'Your videos are always interesting, Simon. Thanks for sharing, I will definitely do this.'
Not only this, but another wrote: 'Your videos are fantastic! Thank you for showing an ignoramus like me how to do something good in the garden.'
Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme -
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Top gardening trends of 2025
Gardening experts at
Matrix planting
It seems that a top planting trend for this year is going to be Matrix Planting.
In essence, planting in groups or blocks to give an effect of being wild whilst actually being carefully managed.
Selection of the plants is essential, to give year-round interest either with flowers, seed heads or frosted/snowy spent flower heads. Some recommend using plants that seed around, but this could make managing your matrix planting harder to keep under control.
Chrysanthemum comeback
I hope that the humble Chrysanthemum makes as much of a comeback this year as Dahlias have over recent years, because the simple single flowered types, such as 'Innocence' and 'Cottage Apricot' would be spectacular within a matrix scheme.
The hardy varieties are so easy to grow in a sunny spot and give such a valuable burst of late summer and autumn colour that would lift any dull- looking border.
Blended borders
For some time now we have been promoting the growing of veg within ornamental borders and I think this could really take off this year.
The choice of ornamental-looking varieties available in seed catalogues is phenomenal and, if managed correctly, visitors to your garden will not even realise that you have veg growing!
Must-have tool
My secret is out. I discovered the Hori Hori a couple of years ago and now it seems so is everyone else.
It is such a well-made, adaptable tool that can be used as a trowel or weeding tool in the garden that and everyone I speak to who have used it absolutely would not now be without it. Enough said!

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