I don’t know if this is a working barn. It looks to me like a dairy barn but I haven’t seen animals about. It could still have plenty of practical uses.
Category: Barns
Gate gnome
DH reported to me recently that he’d seen a cool carving. A mailbox. Now where was it? After some back and forth a location emerged, more or less.
The other day we were on the right road. “There!…” “No…” Finally we found it. On a gate. No mailbox in sight. But I admit it is an interesting carving.
I also liked the look of the barn beyond the fence.
Barn at sunset
Another barn
This barn is across the street from the one I showed you yesterday. Although the furniture in the doorway indicates it may not be in traditional use, a chicken disappeared inside seconds before I took this shot. Who knows? She may have gone in to set up for afternoon tea. Sequim chickens are a classy lot.
Here’s a side view. This is a really interesting little farm. I’ll show you more tomorrow.
Feed barn?
Victor’s Lavender
Over the years I’ve heard interesting lavender talks at the Sequim Lavender Festival. Last weekend I heard one of the best yet at Victor’s Lavender. Any lavender farm is pretty by its nature and Victor’s is no exception. But Victor’s Lavender has one special difference: Victor Gonzalez.
Victor is an expert in growing and propagating lavender which he freely admits he learned through trial and error. He came from a farm family that legally emigrated from Mexico to the U.S. when he was 15 years old. His strong work ethic eventually landed him a job at a local Sequim farm whose manager was interested in growing lavender, a plant Victor had never heard of. Failures taught Victor one lesson after another until he was successfully propagating tens of thousands of plants. Today he not only produces lavender plants and products commercially he also consults internationally on cultivating lavender, including trips for the USAID’s Farmer-to-Farmer program. Click here for more information about Victor. He’s an interesting guy!
Here’s the front view of Victor’s operation. Tomorrow I’ll tell you about the police car parked in front.
The stuff of dreams
The Sequim Lavender Festival planted stars in my eyes before we moved here. So many of the lavender farms have that dreamy, picturesque beauty that fills lifestyle fantasies. For me it’s almost Martha-Stewart-meets-Alice-in-Wonderland. Too crazy good to be true. But it isn’t, at least during Lavender Weekend and most of summer. This is Oliver’s Lavender Farm.
The location is glorious and the grounds are so well groomed. A place this gorgeous needs a combination of staff and obsession. And a fistful of green thumbs, too. I love wandering through such a beautiful farm. Before moving here I held high hopes that some of it might rub off on me.
This is the home that greets you as you arrive at Oliver’s. Really, can’t you just imagine moving in? Help me, Martha!