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.

Flowers

Select from variety of flower arrangements with bright flowers and vibrant blossoms! Same Day Delivery Available!

Roses

Classically beautiful and elegant, assortment of roses is a timeless and thoughtful gift!

Plants

Blooming and Green Plants.

Florists in Carver, MA

Find local Carver, Massachusetts florists below that deliver beautiful flowers to residences, business, funeral homes and hospitals in Carver and surrounding areas. Choose from roses, lilies, tulips, orchids, carnations and more from the variety of flower arrangements in a vase, container or basket. Place your flower delivery order online of call.

Carver Flower Shops

Carver MA News

Feb 1, 2020

Flowers for Drew: Remembering the life of an editor, writer and friend - Delaware State News - Delaware State News

Drew took what had become a cliched annual feature on a sandcastle contest and made it clever. The headline was, “The Rodins of Rehoboth.” A sand carver’s secret, Drew learned, was staking out a good spot. “The early bird gets the berm,” he wrote. University of Delaware journalism professor Dennis Jackson recognized Drew’s talent early on and recommended him to the State News in 1992 when we had an opening for a sportswriter. Not long after, we moved Drew to a role as a news editor for our sister paper, The Daily Whale, in his hometown of Lewes. It was there that Drew really started to shine, putting his knowledge and appreciation of the area into play. He appreciated the Sussex County landscape as much as its unique culture. Perhaps that made it easy for him to interview Dover International Speedway builder Melvin Joseph — a man who, despite having only a sixth-grade education, started his Georgetown construction business with just a dump truck and a shovel. Drew Ostroski “They had Sussex connections, they had common ground,” said Mr. Nardone. “You can’t write about someone unless you get to know them in some way. Drew always found common ground and found a way to relate to people. “He did that with Roy Klein, the ‘Duke of Kent.’ I think he appreciated what those people accomplished.” Drew spotted quirky stuff and found ways to work it into his stories. There was the story he did on mosquito control. “They had a young guy run across the marsh and then they would count the bites,” he remembered. In 1999, he did an amazing piece on “The Dual” – what Delaware old-timers used to call U.S. 13. It was then that he met James E. Clark, the proprietor of a service station in Dover. We found it odd that it remained opened, yet no longer had gas pumps thanks to an environmental regulation. His headline — “Running on fumes” — came naturally. “Clarkie” was still offering service to locals, though. He would check oil and inflate tires, and sometimes he would drive his old customers to a nearby station to fill up their tanks because that’s what he always did for them. After meeting him, Drew tucked away another idea after learning Clarkie had survived the Indian River Inlet bridge collapse in 1948. The man plunged into the icy waters and managed to swim to a bulkhead where he reached out for a tire that saved his life. The lede of the story: “James E. “Clarkie” Clark curls his left pinky finger toward his hand.“ “More than 50 years ago, it ...

Apr 27, 2019

Column: My grandmother's rose blooms each Easter - Valley News

Mayflower bill of lading, as early as 1621, the pilgrims planted roses at Plymouth Plantation. Among these were “reds, whites and damasks,” as John Carver, their first governor, wrote in his journal. Some of these were found in the wild, others possibly brought as slips, cuttings and even roots from England. Wyck, a historic house in the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia, has what some consider to be “the oldest rose garden in original plan in America,” as its website describes it. Jane Bowne Haines, who lived at Wyck, introduced roses to the garden in 1824. The “Bella Donna” and “Beautiful Woman” roses were among those passed on through generations.Later immigrants who flooded into our country brought the roses they treasured along with them.Our rose started here. The patriarch of my family, Papou, came from Greece around 1910 as a boy with nothing — certainly not a flower. For work, he shined...

Nov 28, 2018

The flowers man: Lakeline Oaks resident surprises ladies with flowers every week - Hillcountrynews

By NICK BROTHERS, HCN Managing Editor For 59 years, four months, two weeks, 17 hours and 15 minutes, Andy Carver made it a point to buy and surprise his wife Regina with flowers every Friday whenever he was stateside from his career in the military. They weren't always roses-occasionally carnations-but she always loved them. About a year ago, Carver and his wife moved in to Lakeline Oaks in Cedar Park. The following day, after the movers moved in their furniture, she suffered a massive stroke and passed away. For three or four months, Carver grieved internally, and did his best to keep appearances that he was ok. "There was something missing, really missing," Carver said. "I couldn't think of what it was." Eventually, Carver got to know his new neighbors, one of whom was infirm. He bought a dozen roses and gave them to them. The smiles he received in return struck him like an epiphany. "I thought to myself, that's the one thing I was missing," he said. "I love seeing people smile." Since July of last year, 84-year-old Carver has made it his mission to buy a bouquet of flowers each week an...

May 24, 2018

The Outside Story: Mountain Laurel Is Special, In Bloom or Not

He explained that deer typically eat laurel when they're short of other food. "In my experience, they like the cultivars best."Wood carvers also appreciate the plant. It is the favored wood of Dan Dustin, a New Hampshire spoon carver. He often goes out with a pack basket in search of a "spoony" laurel - an old one with branches as thick as his arm. Mountain laurel also has the name spoonwood, and legend has it that Native Americans carved it for this purpose."It's lovely carving wood," Dustin says. "It's very stable, meaning it doesn't like to crack as much as some other woods. That makes for easier carving, because it can be carved green. It's white in color, strong and light and without any taste or perfume." He estimates that he's carved 20,000 spoons out of mountain laurel, and plenty from the wood of its relative, blueberry. Mountain laurel is lovely wherever you find it, but some of the larger stands are worth a planned visit. Timing of the bloom is affected by elevation and latitude, as well as spring temperatures: an unusually warm, sunny spring moves the flowering season earlier by one to two weeks. There are very large specimens at The Fells, also known as the Hay estate, on the banks of Lake Sunapee. New Hampshire's Russell-Abbott State Forest, Pisgah State Park, and Wontastaket State Forest have thick stands, as does Vermont's Black Mountain Natural Area. Maine's largest stand is in the Bijhouwer Forest in Phippsburg. Spectacular collections are found at Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain, Mass.Laurie D. Morrissey is a writer in Hopkinton, N.H. The illustration for this column was drawn by Adelaide Tyrol. The Outside Story is assigned and edited byNorthern Woodlandsmagazine: northernwoodlands.org, and sponsored by the Wellborn Ecology Fund of New Hampshire Charitable Foundation: wellborn@nhcf.org.

Mar 23, 2018

Spring flower show, grow a garden, fruit trees, Minneapolis Home + Garden Show and more

Experts will offer suggestions for planting fruit trees. 6:30 p.m. Tue. Free. Shakopee Library, 235 S. Lewis St. carverscottmastergardeners.org.Children’s gardening workshopKids can roll up their sleeves and get dirty in this hands-on, messy workshop that just may entice them to eat their vegetables. Adults will introduce gardening to help kids grow their own vegetables at home. Children can explore the gardens, see a variety of vegetables and pot a plant to take home. 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. April 14. $10. Oliver Kelley Farm, 15788 Kelley Farm Rd., Elk River. Register at mnhs.org/kelleyfarm.MELISSA WALKER ... (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

Jul 27, 2017

Master Gardeners help Tennessee grow better communities

Circle, one near V.O. Dobbins, and one near Holly Hills. The Crumley House in Limestone has one, as do Healing Hands Health Clinic in Bristol and Carver Center in Johnson City. Probably the most well-known is the Hope Community Garden in Kingsport. Doug Hilton, one of our long-time Master Gardeners, has taken a special interest in that particular garden. It’s the largest garden in Kingsport, with 84 raised beds tended/owned by two churches, the Social Security Office, Habitat, Lowe’s, and other groups and individuals.”But planting and nurturing gardens are not the only things Master Gardeners do. Master Gardeners also design demonstration gardens to educate citizens on sustainable lawn, garden and landscape practices; they answer gardening and pest management questions at the county extension office; plan and host home and garden shows, garden festivals, county fair booths and diagnostic clinics to reach out to residents; write articles or give presentations to educate the community; work with youth and horticulture through 4H and Junior Master Gardeners; support the community through Plant-A-Row-For-the-Hungry, Habitat for Humanity, community gardens, beautification projects and much, much more.If becoming a Master Gardener sounds like something you might like, then you might consider becoming a Tennessee Extension Master Gardener. To do that, complete an application and take the classes. The 2017 Master Gardener class schedule meets from 9 a.m. to noon, Tuesdays and Thursdays, from Sept. 5 through Oct. 31. The cost is $175 (with partial scholarships available). The registration deadline is Aug. 15. Some of the topics to be covered include: Turf Grass and Lawns, 3 Season Gardening, Growing Ornamentals, Basic Landscape Design, Garden Writing, Urban Gardening and Plant Clinics. Most classes take place at the new Ron Ramsey Regional Agriculture Center.The new center, situated on 10 acres of land, is conveniently located near Tri-Cities Airport. It includes a conference area with 300-seat capacity, a commercial kitchen, state-of-the-art audio and visual equipment, a 30,000 square-foot arena space for agriculture and livestock programs, plus office space for the UT/TSU County Extension Agent; 4H Youth Development Agent, Family Consumer Science Agent; Extension Program Assistant TNCEP; and Master Gardeners.For more information, contact Chris Ramsey by email at cwramsey@... (Kingsport Times News)