Birthday Flowers

A heart-warming Birthday surprise for someone you truly care about!

Funeral Service

Funeral Service Flowers for a well-lived life is the most cherished. Be that open heart for that special someone in grief.

Sympathy

Create that sense of peace and tranquility in their life with a gentle token of deepest affections.

Bouillon Flowers

Order flowers and gifts from Bouillon Flowers located in Greene IA for a birthday, anniversary, graduation or a funeral service. The address of the flower shop is 3074 Lodge Ave, Greene Iowa 50636 Zip. The phone number is (641) 823-4538. We are committed to offer the most accurate information about Bouillon Flowers in Greene IA. Please contact us if this listing needs to be updated. Bouillon Flowers delivers fresh flowers – order today.

Business name:
Bouillon Flowers
Address:
3074 Lodge Ave
City:
Greene
State:
Iowa
Zip Code:
50636
Phone number:
(641) 823-4538
if this is your business: ( update info) (delete this listing)
Express you love, friendship, thanks, support - or all of the above - with beautiful flowers & gifts!

Find Bouillon Flowers directions to 3074 Lodge Ave in Greene, IA (Zip 50636 ) on the Map. It's latitude and longitude coordinates are 42.909859, -92.800217 respectively.

Florists in Greene IA and Nearby Cities

106 East Traer Street
Greene, IA 50636
(0.42 Miles from Bouillon Flowers)
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Clarksville, IA 50619
(9.92 Miles from Bouillon Flowers)
1313 Gilbert St
Charles City, IA 50616
(13.53 Miles from Bouillon Flowers)
715 Kelly Mall
Charles City, IA 50616
(13.76 Miles from Bouillon Flowers)
3454 Warbler Avenue
Dougherty, IA 50433
(13.86 Miles from Bouillon Flowers)

Flowers and Gifts News

Apr 4, 2021

Lessons learned: A florist shares how she stays connected to customers during COVID-19 - Battle Creek Enquirer

We increased our plant orders and were able to keep our loyal fans happy with all the luscious greenery they desired.More from opinionFlower deliveries became a surprisingly important thing for many. We had an uptick in floral deliveries a couple months after the beginning of the pandemic. People were not able to see each other and wanted to send love to those they care about. We created budget-friendly options to help make it affordable and convenient to send a gift.One of the biggest changes for the staff was the daily cleaning regimen. We adopted CDC-recommended practices immediately, and continue them to this day. Regularly sanitizing our store, maintaining six feet of distance and always wearing masks has taken some extra effort — but we have remained open and healthy. These practices have helped our customers feel safe to shop as well.Video presence on social media during the pandemic has become a new norm for us. Staying visually connected with our followers helps us continue to connect with the people that make it possible for us to exist. Our audience enjoys the weekly projects and updates that we offer, and we appreciate the feedback and engagement from them. We continue to have online sales and shipping options as well as window shopping and curbside pickup.We have learned that it is extremely important to be nimble to operate a successful small business. We focus on solutions and put our energy towards being positive. It was important for us to understand both the global and local impacts, as well as the seriousness of a pandemic while doing what we could to continue to spread love with flowers.If you can maintain a positive, creative attitude towards whatever the day brings, you can continue to succeed through all the challenges.Elisha Hodge is the owner of Plumeria Botanical Boutique in Battle Creek.

Apr 4, 2021

After taking most of 2020 season off, Flower Fields set to bloom again - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Staff gardener Judy MacKenzie was trimming up greenery in the artist gardens near the Flower Fields’ front entrance. For the third year in a row, she’s creating scenic spots where visitors can pose for selfies. This year, she’s created garden archways with hanging mosaic artwork. Last year, she created an elaborate “Pot Head” garden featuring pots resembling ancient Greek busts that have plants growing out of their “heads.” She said it was heartbreaking putting so much work into the potheads last year, only to see the attraction close.“I came back to look at it a few weeks later and it looked so good but there was nobody here to enjoy it,” MacKenzie said. To ensure safe social distancing, The Flower Fields in Carlsbad will reopen March 1 with online-only ticket sales, timed entry and marked queues out front for visitor check-ins.(Eduardo Contreras/The San Diego Union-Tribune) Over the past quarter-century, the Flower Fields have become one of the region’s most-photographed tourist attractions. In the early years, Clarke was thrilled to welcome 75,000 visitors between March 1 and Mother’s Day weekend. But with the advent of Instagram and other social media platforms, business exploded. In 2019, the attraction drew nearly 300,000.The long sloping hillside, which stretches for one mile along Armada Drive from Cannon Road south to Palomar Airport Road, has been home to flowering plants since 1923, when Paul Ecke Sr. moved his family’s poinsettia-growing operation south from Los Angeles.When the Eckes transitioned from cut poinsettia flowers to potted poinsettia plants and moved their growing operations inside greenhouses, the Carlsbad fields were leased in 1965 to another local grower, Edwin Frazee. His family began farming ranunculus flowers in the 1930s and over time developed them into hardier plants with stronger stems and bigger flowers with more petals. When Frazee retired in 1993, the Eckes brought in a new grower, Mellano & Co., which has farmed the property ever since. Fred Clarke, general manager of The Flower Fields in Carlsbad, demonstrates a new selfie station in the artist gardens. The Flower Fields will reopen on March 1. (Eduardo Contreras/The San Diego Union-Tribune) To ensure multiple acres of flowers are always in bloom during the spring season, the fields are planted in sequence, four to five weeks apart, starting with the fields farthest north in early September. Those northern fields are just now coming into bloom. By Mother’s Day, the southernmost acres will be awash in color. Usually each spring, the Flower Fields hosts a busy calendar of events with multiple classes, festivals, art fairs and concerts. Many of thos...

Dec 10, 2020

Tips for using a real Christmas tree or other holiday plants - Standard-Times

Christmas cactus does like humidity though, so mist it regularly with distilled water.Greenery is just as important as colorful flowers — cuttings of holly shrubs, junipers or rosemary in the landscape can be taken to make fresh wreaths and boughs for mantles, centerpieces, etc. Just be careful to use good pruning techniques, and don’t cut the plants back excessively. And finally, though mistletoe is considered a pest to the trees it grows on, it’s also a well-established tradition to have a sprig hanging in a doorway. Might as well use it if it’s around — simply take a large cutting and tie on a decorative ribbon to hang it up with.Allison Watkins is the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Agent for horticulture in Tom Green County. Contact her at aewatkins@ag.tamu.edu.

Dec 10, 2020

Corners of Eden’s goal is flower power during dark times - New Bern Sun Journal

Charlie.Hall@newbernsj.com Meg Wethington and Eva O’Steen love plants with a special passion that extends beyond the obvious beauty that flowers and greenery provide.Being community-minded and socially conscious gives a glimpse of just two of the traits they bring to the table for a new business that could be simply explained as flower power in dark times.It is called Corners of Eden, which the women describe as a beautification project.It consists of consulting and designing custom organic potted corners and small-scale gardens inside and outside of the home or office.Wethington said the business will provide education and implementation of easily self-sustainable plant systems, emphasizing nourishment, healing, and beauty utilizing organic materials, techniques and flora native to North Carolina.There is a bonus - an offspring component called Eden Elsewhere to spread the beauty and benefits of plants throughout the New Bern area.“Our business model allows for us to finance these projects through our corporation,” said Wethington. “We are a business who works for their community and gives back out of our own pocket. The business was started so t...

Dec 10, 2020

2020 Holiday Gift Guide: Gardening - The San Diego Union-Tribune

For those lacking outdoor space at home, consider an annual membership to the San Diego Botanic Garden in Encinitas. Explore the 37 acres of greenery, featuring 27 gardens blooming with plants, flowers and trees from around the world. Annual membership includes unlimited visits, free parking, two complimentary guest passes, and other perks. Basic, one-year memberships can be purchased for either individuals or families, with senior, student and military discounts available. $55-$85. sdbgarden.org The entrance of the San Diego Botanical Garden(Rachel Cobb) ...

Oct 15, 2020

Florists 'bomb' Philly mailboxes for 2020 election ballots - WHYY

She decorated a mailbox at the corner of Carpenter Lane and Greene Street in Mount Airy. (Emma Lee/WHYY) One of the participants is Jennie Love, owner of Love ‘N Fresh Flowers. She created an autumn-colored rainbow of flowers arching about six feet high and plunging toward the slot of a postal box at the corner of Germantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike in Chestnut Hill. The arch starts at the bottom with deep copper-colored amaranth tassels, moves through a gradient of orange and dark yellow hues, and ends with a spear of bright golds and buttery yellows pointing toward the mailbox. “We have lots of dahlias. It’s prime dahlia season in October,” said Love. “They start deep and rich at the bottom of the arch, then it gets the bright happiness close to the mailbox. That’s the goal: be bright and happy at the mailbox.” Love is both a farmer and florist. She grows everything she uses on a five-acre, certified natural farm in Roxborough. The bread and butter of her business had been weddings, but that dried up this year. Last April, her prospects were dire. Over the summer she launched a flower delivery service where people can pre-order a box of flowers and have it delivered weekly to their door. Called Porch Petals, Love keeps the delivery radius tight – she only services Philadelphia’s Northwest neighborhoods near her farm. To her surprise, it worked. Porch Petals caught on and saved her business. Floral designer Diane Floss (left) and Jennie Love of Love and Fresh Flowers decorated the mailbox at Germantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike with a rainbow of flowers for the United by 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...

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