Provence

Lavender Season in Provence: Beyond the Postcard

22 May 2026

Getting four semi-conscious family members into a car before sunrise, a daughter who became a tourist attraction, and the lavender crème brûlée I am still trying to recreate.

Every year in late June or early July, my wife and I try to motivate the kids to get up before sunrise to go look at lavender. This involves a negotiation process that would exhaust a UN diplomat. There are veiled threats, vague promises of stopping at the boulangerie, and eventually, at some ungodly hour, four semi-conscious humans climb into the car. By the time we get there they are quiet, either still half asleep or genuinely stunned into silence. Golden hour does that.

The lavender landscape of Provence at golden hour

The Abbey

We've been to Sault, we've driven through the Drôme Provençale, but our favourite is still the Abbaye de Sénanque. If you approach from the Gordes side and suddenly see that patchwork of purple nestled between the limestone hills, it stops you every time. Pull over at the vantage point and take your panorama shots - it is absolutely worth it. One practical note: since earlier this year the road has been made one-way from Gordes to the abbey. You can no longer turn around and drive back the way you came. You follow the road past the abbey and eventually turn right to loop back up to Gordes.

The Abbaye de Sénanque surrounded by lavender

One strong piece of advice: go early. If you arrive mid-morning you will be sharing it with very large groups of tourists, and your experience will be somewhat different from the peaceful lavender moment you had in mind.

The Daughter, the Bees, and the Photographers

We learned this the hard way on our first visit after arriving in Provence. We did Sénanque and Sault in the same day, which was ambitious, and we got to the abbey a bit late. Our daughter had just started sitting up on her own and her grandmother had made her a little suit for the occasion. We set her down in the lavender to take a few photos of her.

Our daughter in the lavender at the Abbaye de Sénanque

Within about thirty seconds we were looking at the back of a Chinese woman's head because she had also started photographing our daughter. Then the rest of the group joined in. Our daughter had become a tourist attraction. We are still amused with the possibility of her being framed and hanging on someone's wall somewhere in China.

Then we noticed the bees. Lavender fields in full bloom are essentially functioning beehives at ground level. Getting her out of there required us to push through a group of enthusiastic photographers who were not yet aware the session was over.

Go early.

The Vantage Point

Just before you reach Gordes again there is a vantage point looking out towards Ménerbes and the other hilltop villages. There are picnic tables there and we always stop. Baguettes, charcuterie, a decent cheese selection, and anchovy-stuffed olives. A proper Provençal picnic by any reasonable measure.

This year we are heading to Valensole again. A friend who is a legionnaire has bought a house there and it would be rude not to visit during peak season.

Lavender and Lavandin Are Not the Same Thing

What you see in those enormous, perfectly uniform purple rows at Valensole is almost certainly not true lavender. It is lavandin - a hybrid between true lavender and spike lavender. Lavandin is hardier, produces more oil per hectare, and grows in thick dramatic rows that photograph beautifully. It is what drives the postcard industry.

True lavender, known as lavande fine, grows at higher altitudes - around Sault and into the Alpine foothills. It has a softer, more complex scent and is considered the premium product for serious perfumery. Lower yield, higher value, and a noticeably more delicate character than its hybrid cousin.

The high-altitude lavender fields near Sault

Both are worth seeing. Valensole gives you the scale and the drama. Sault gives you the altitude, the finer lavender, and considerably fewer tour buses.

Before You Go

I put together a map of the lavender fields worth visiting, with websites included where I could find them. One important thing before you load up the car: phone the local bureau de tourisme first. Bloom timing shifts every year depending on the weather, and the difference between a spectacular field and a field of grey sticks is sometimes just a week. A two-minute phone call saves a wasted morning.

The Part Nobody Talks About

Most people associate lavender with soap, skincare, and the inside of old wardrobes. Which is fair. But shortly after we arrived in Provence, my wife and I had dinner in Isle-sur-la-Sorgue and I ordered a lavender-infused crème brûlée that I still think about. Not in a vague nostalgic way - I mean I literally ordered a second one right after I finished the first one. If they had served it in a bucket I would have asked for a spoon.

I have tried to recreate it at home several times. I have not nailed it yet. When I do, the recipe goes up on the site.

If you happen to have a reliable version, I would genuinely love to hear it. Drop it in the comments below.

🐸 Marcel says:

Go before sunrise. Bring a baguette. Do not put the baby in the lavender if there are tourists nearby.

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Lavender Season in Provence: Beyond the Postcard | French Countryside Living