Eighty years of the same land.

The farm has been in our family since 1945. The lavender arrived in 2020.
Some things take time to find their purpose.

Visit the Farm

Free admission. Open late May through June. Come when the lavender blooms.


Plan your visit.

Ruby Acres Lavender Farm is open to the public each year during lavender season โ€” late May through June, when the field is in full bloom. There's no charge to visit. Just come.

20006 Jesse James Farm Road, Kearney, MO
One mile from the Jesse James Birthplace.


Hours

Saturdays, 9 am โ€” late May through June

Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at @rubyacreslavenderFarm for updates each season. We'll post when the farm opens and when the bloom is at its peak.


Getting here.

We're located at 20006 Jesse James Farm Road in Kearney, Missouri โ€” about one mile west of the Jesse James Birthplace. Look for the lavender.

Parking is available on site. Pull in and someone will point you in the right direction.


Golf cart rides to the field.

The lavender field is about 1,000 feet from the shop โ€” a nice walk when the morning is cool, but we know Missouri in June. Our daughter India runs golf cart rides to the field and back for anyone who wants them. No reservation needed, just ask.

This means the field is accessible for everyone โ€” older visitors, families with small children, anyone who'd rather save their legs for the lavender rows.


U-Pick Lavender.

We provide everything you need to cut your own lavender bundle โ€” clippers, a zip tie, and a fun informational sheet about all of our lavender varieties.

Lavender bundles are $10 โ€” fit as much lavender as you can into a 1" diameter zip tie. There's real skill to a well-packed bundle, and our visitors take it seriously.

Dried lavender bundles, sachets, hydrosol, and Brianne's full line of handcrafted soaps and bath products are also available in the farm shop.


A few things to know before you arrive.

The field is in full sun. Please bring water, a hat, and sunscreen โ€” especially later in the morning. We recommend arriving early when it's cooler.

Stay on the paths. We love our pollinators and the wildlife that shares the field with us. To keep the habitat healthy, we don't completely mow between the rows. Please stay on the paths and avoid the tall grass.

Walk around the rows, not over them. We've built up raised rows to keep the lavender healthy. Please walk around them rather than stepping across โ€” it protects the roots and keeps the plants coming back year after year.

The shop opens at 9 am on Saturdays. Brianne and India will be there. Darrin is usually at the Liberty Downtown Farmers Market on Saturday mornings โ€” come find us there too if you're in the area.


Also find us at the Liberty Downtown Farmers Market.

On Saturday mornings we have a booth at the Liberty Downtown Farmers Market, where you'll find Brianne's full line of handcrafted soaps, bath products, dried lavender, and more. That's where most people discover us โ€” and then they come out to the farm.

The market runs Saturday mornings in Liberty, Missouri. Check the Liberty Farmers Market schedule for current hours and location.


What's in the shop.

Everything in our shop is made by Brianne โ€” by hand, in small batches, with real ingredients. You'll find:

Lavender โ€” dried bundles, sachets, hydrosol, and culinary lavender when available.

Soaps โ€” handcrafted bar soaps in lavender and other varieties, made since 2011.

Bath & body โ€” lotions, body butter, bath bombs, sugar scrubs, lip balm, foaming hand soap, and more.

Not everything makes it to the online store โ€” the farm shop often has things you won't find anywhere else.


A little history while you're here.

The farm has been in our family since 1945, when my grandparents Ruby and Atha Pearl Ragsdale purchased 51 acres just west of the Jesse James Birthplace. The lavender was planted in 2020 โ€” the newest chapter in a very long story.

The home Brianne and I live in was the neighborhood's one-room schoolhouse. My father attended until it closed in 1954. Most people driving past on Jesse James Farm Road never know any of this is here.

We're glad you found us.