Rich Mountain Natural Products
Order flowers and gifts from Rich Mountain Natural Products located in Mena AR for a birthday, anniversary, graduation or a funeral service. The address of the flower shop is 157 Polk Road 714, Mena Arkansas 71953 Zip. The phone number is (479) 394-1922. We are committed to offer the most accurate information about Rich Mountain Natural Products in Mena AR. Please contact us if this listing needs to be updated. Rich Mountain Natural Products delivers fresh flowers – order today.
Business name:
Rich Mountain Natural Products
Address:
157 Polk Road 714
Express you love, friendship, thanks, support - or all of the above - with beautiful flowers & gifts!
Find Rich Mountain Natural Products directions to 157 Polk Road 714 in Mena, AR (Zip 71953) on the Map. It's latitude and longitude coordinates are 34.580587, -94.262556 respectively.
Florists in Mena AR and Nearby Cities
817 Mena StMena, AR 71953(0.35 Miles from Rich Mountain Natural Products)
3448 Hwy. 71 SMena, AR 71953(4.48 Miles from Rich Mountain Natural Products)
897 Highway 4 EWickes, AR 71973(19.80 Miles from Rich Mountain Natural Products)
232 South Mainpo Box 1640Waldron, AR 72958(23.27 Miles from Rich Mountain Natural Products)
Flowers and Gifts News
Apr 4, 2021Ridge Hill Has Spring Fever: Flowers and Activities Reopening - Patch.com
The hard work is only now paying off with a colorful array of tulips and daffodils. The spring flowers are expected to be a centerpiece of the promenades for just a few more weeks - the giant bunny-shaped trimmed topiaries in the gardens will last a bit longer. In addition to reopening activities, a new Cajun restaurant named Storming Crab will be celebrating its grand opening with a special spring menu. To celebrate the season, parking at Ridge Hill is currently free for shoppers. Here are just a few of the activities now open at Ridge Hill: Storming Crab is now open.Legoland will be re-opening on March 26th.Rockin' Jump will re-opening on March 26th.Showcase Cinemas is open for private screenings.Monster Mini Golf is now open.Muse Paint Bar is now open for private events.Selfie opportunities with the big bunny shaped shrubbery are ongoing and free of charge. The management team at Ridge Hill stresses that the health and safety of visitors is the top priority. Coronavirus safety protocols, including the practicing of social distancing, mask wearing and employee health screenings continue to be in effect.
Oct 15, 2020Florists 'bomb' Philly mailboxes for 2020 election ballots - WHYY
Blooms event. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
“Porch Petals is a COVID pivot, but it proves our community here in Chestnut Hill and Mt. Airy – they are phenomenal. I would start weeping if I think about it too much,” she said. “This community saved our farm.”
Love is fortunate that she is both a grower and an arranger: she supplies herself. Other florists who rely on shipped flowers have fared much worse as international supply chains have broken down during the global pandemic. Flowers, after all, cannot sit in warehouses.
United By Blooms is ostensibly a get-out-the-vote campaign addressing anxieties about voting by mail and the tenuous financial position of the Postal Service. Love says, “I don’t have answers to any of that.”
More important to her is that this floral arrangement be a love letter to the community that proves, even during a pandemic, flow...
May 1, 2020Waddington florist delivers springtime cheer amid virus blues - NNY360
COVID-19, buckets of carnations sat inside the Domena residence.They wouldn’t be sent backstage and gifted to local teens acting their hearts out. But they certainly wouldn’t wilt without first making someone’s day, either.“You have to be pretty resourceful in these times,” Christine Domena said this week.Mrs. Domena and her husband Bobby have managed Waddington Blooms out of their Lincoln Avenue residence for nearly two decades, and Mrs. Domena has more than 35 years of experience in the flower business.After the Domenas received news of the musical cancellations, they offered a carnation special: $10 for a dozen.“We sold out in a day,” Mrs. Domena said.Though the front door of Waddington Blooms is closed to in-person visitors, the Domena phone line is open, and Christine and Bobby continue to deliver, leaving flowers on doorsteps and asking customers to pay by card or work out another no-contact payment arrangement.The couple also has decided to waive delivery fees within a 20-mile radius of Waddington Blooms during the pandemic.Order volume has decreased over the last month, the Domenas said, but business has been steady, particularly during Easter week.Waddington Blooms filled orders for St. Ma...
Mar 19, 2020‘Still in shock’ over death of rider Kat Morel - Sherwood Park News
But I took a chance on her. It took her a few years of training to get her feet and she has turned out to be phenomenal.”She also talked about her passion for the sport and her hopes of reaching a pinnacle and getting to represent Canada in a major event.“It is like any dream, you never really know what can happen. All you can do is stay positive, work hard and do your best to educate yourself on how you can keep getting to the next levels. Nobody in any sport has a straight arrow to the top, it is always a bumpy road. It takes hard work and it can eventually pay off. I believe that if I work hard enough, that is definitely obtainable. You have to have a horse that really enjoys what they do, and I have that.“I think it is a realistic dream. But you have to work really hard because there are other people out there working just as hard to get to the same goal and there is only room for a few.”Equestrian Canada is now working with sister federation, US Equestrian, to investigate the fall and to continue developing methods to improve safety for both riders and horses.sjones@postmedia.comtwitter.com/Realshanejones
Blast from the past
Squires...
Dec 18, 2019A tree in Brazil’s arid northeast rains nectar from its flowers - Science News
Brazil, a slow drizzle begins to fall. But not
from the sky. Domingos de Melo is under the tree’s canopy, and the “rain” is sweet.
Behold Hymenaea
cangaceira, a species whose flowers make so much nectar that it overflows
and falls in unusually copious and fragrant showers, even though the price of
water in this part of the world is steep.
Domingos de Melo and colleagues at the Universidade Federal de Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil, had been studying bat pollination of local plants for two decades in the region when, in 2015, one type of bat-pollinated tree struck them as odd. Its nectar, rather than just the flower petals, was imbued with its own perfume — a phenomenon poorly understood in bat-pollinated plants — and the plant made loads of it.
From 2015 to 2018, the team
studied a population of H. cangaceira in
Brazil’s Catimbau National Park. Each day after sunset during the trees’
reproductive season, between December and March, hundreds of flowers bloom on
each tree and drip with nectar before wilting with the dawn.
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An individual flower
produced up to 1.5 milliliters of nectar per night, the team found. That meant
that one full-siz...
Nov 9, 2019Fairchild's Million Orchid Project Brings Native Plants to Miami Beach's Lincoln Road - Miami New Times
Enter the Million Orchid Project.Pedestrians can enjoy 500 brightly colored orchids while strolling along South Beach's popular promenade. “Each orchid has its own personality and thrives at a particular time. As you walk through different seasons, different orchids will be in flower," says Tim Schmand, executive director of the Lincoln Road Business Improvement District. “Bring your camera — there are some breathtaking moments.” Even in this bustling shopping and dining destination, Schmand says, he has already seen people stopping to admire and photograph the orchids. In addition to providing beauty, the project is an important conservation effort and a step toward respecting and renewing South Florida’s unique natural resources. As Schmand says: “Nature begets nature.” For instance, while installing the orchids on Lincoln Road, the Fairchild team discovered the exciting results of another environmental initiative: The endangered Atala butterfly was thriving in the area.
EXPANDPhoto courtesy of Lincoln Road Business Improvement District
In the 1990s, landscape architects in Miami noticed the need for the rehabilitation of native plants. They concentrated on the coontie, a plant that used to grow abundantly in the Florida highlands and was the only source of food for larval Atala. Coontie was harvested to make Florida arrowroot and became such a vital part of early South Florida industries that it nearly went extinct.
“But landscape architects in the '90s replanted them, and now Lincoln Road is packed with these Atala butterflies,” Schmand says. “It’s really quite spectacular, and we probably wouldn’t have noticed that if it weren’t for the orchids.” In this way, the orchid project is a reminder to consider the vital balances and relationships of an ecosystem as “the architecture of the natural world,” Schmand says. “Most of us walk down the street and say, ‘Oh, that’s a pretty flower.’ We never think about what the real impact of that pretty flower is to the wider part of nature: the transfer of pollen, the c...
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