Florists in Blacksburg, SC
Find local Blacksburg, South Carolina florists below that deliver beautiful flowers to residences, business, funeral homes and hospitals in Blacksburg 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.
Blacksburg Flower Shops
Blacksburg SC News
Mar 2, 2017Emily Bender: the year-round flower lady
Emily Bender is Blacksburg’s flower lady. Yellow yarrow, rose dahlias, purple coxcombs, pink gladioluses – her bouquets and wreaths bring color to people’s lives at their highest and lowest times.Although she no longer sells flowers as a business, Bender makes and gives away nearly a hundred flower arrangements a year, friends say. Subscription Required
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Mar 2, 2017Warm weather favors blooming flowers, trees, shrubs and bugs
Triad and foothills to the mid 30s to high 40s in the mountain counties, said Jake Ruckman, a weather service meteorologist in Blacksburg, Va.“We aren’t usually this warm in February,” Ruckman said.Taking advantage of the warm weather are blooming plants such as cherry trees, flowering apricots, tulip magnolias and star magnolias as well as winter honeysuckle bush, witch hazels, daffodils and Lenten roses, said Hayden Shuping, the greenhouse manager at Reynolda Gardens in Winston-Salem.“All of the things that are blooming right now can handle a little frost,” Shuping said. “In nature, you have to take it as it comes. The climate, from the week to week, is always different.”Leslie Peck, a horticulturist with the Forsyth County Cooperative Extension Service, said people with flowering plants and shrubs should stay aware of the high and low temperatures in February and March.“Most of the stuff that is flowing is taking their cues from the warm weather,” Peck said.Gardeners should add water to their blooming plants to insulate their roots if the temperatures drop below freezing, she said. Friday’s forecast calls for a low temperature of 29 degrees.The warm weather also could bring some unwanted guests to the Triad — mosquitoes, said Louis Jackai, an entomologist and the chairman of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Design at N.C. A&T State University in Greensboro.Mosquitoes breed around sources of water such as rivers and streams, Jackai said.However, mosquitoes and other biting insects likely will remain dormant during these final days of winter, he said.“Once it starts getting warm, they (mosquitoes) will be active,” Jackai said. “They could get their butts frozen if the temperatures drops below freezing at night.”Low temperatures at night in the low to high 30s or cooler likely will minimize activity among the mosquitoes and other insects, he said.“When it’s real good and cold, no self-respecting mosquito would be out,” Jackai said.#ndn-video-player-3.ndn_embedded .ndn_floatContainer { margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 20px; }... (Winston-Salem Journal)
Dec 22, 2016Winners announced in Town of Blacksburg Holiday Parade
Organizers have released a list of the winning entries in Blacksburg’s 2016 Holiday Parade:
General Float
1st — Glade Road Growers
2nd — New River Valley Chapter, Virginia Master Naturalists
3rd — Heartstrings Pet Lodging & Spa
Youth Float
1st — Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office
2nd — Lil Leapers LLC
3rd — Cub Scout Pack 152
Non-Float
1st — New River Bicycle Association
2nd — Crystal Boyle
3rd — NRV Jeep Club
Honorable Mention
Winter Frost Farms Ride-A-Rescue
Blacksburg Chinese School
American Heritage Girls
Submitted by Teresa Davis
... (Roanoke Times)
Aug 15, 2016Blacksburg church's flower garden funds good causes
BLACKSBURG — Behind St. Mary’s Catholic Church where the land slopes toward distant Toms Creek and Brush Mountain rears up to fill half the horizon, flowers are blooming. Beds of zinnias, sunflowers, Shasta daisies, gladiolus, cosmos and other blossoms create lines of riotous color over almost half an acre.
Though as pretty as a confetti-strewn carpet, this garden does not host weddings, teas or parties. It is a working garden, a plot where church volunteers raise flowers to sell.
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Feb 3, 2016Lieutenant Colonel (Ret.) Peter J. Chittick
Bachelor´s of Science, Military Engineering and his commission as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army in 1957. He and his family moved to Blacksburg, Virginia in 1978, where he attended the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He was honorably discharged as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1980 after 23 years of service to the United States that included two tours in Vietnam and tours of duty in Germany, Guatemala, and Panama. He rejoined the workforce in 1982 at EDS, SAIC and BDM, this time from a new home base in Middleburg, Virginia, where he continued to serve his country as a civilian. After failing to retire yet again, he returned to his local-delivery roots in service to the family-owned Middleburg Floral Gallery. He finally moved once more to Fredericksburg, VA in 2015. Peter was a Mason, a member of the Lion´s Club, the American Legion, a longtime supporter of the Ronald McDonald House, and made weekly deliveries for Seven Loaves Food Bank in Middleburg.He is survived by his wife of 51 years, the former Geraldine Hunt of Poughkeepsie, New York, and their four children; Shaun Chittick of Chesapeake, VA, Loreen Chittick Hitch of Glen Allen, VA, Jeri Lee Thomas of Reston, VA, Linda Beck of South Orange, NJ; and by 7 “damn smart” grandchildren, and two brothers, Richard T. “Ted” and David Allen Chittick.Family and friends are invited to a memorial service on Friday, January 15 from 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Royston Funeral Home, 106 East Washington Street, Middleburg, Virginia and a reception and Celebration of Life, immediately following, from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm at Emmanuel Episcopal Reception Hall, directly across East Washington Street from the Funeral Home. An inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery will be held in 2016.In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation in Peter´s name to the Ronald McDonald House, https://donate.rmhc.org.Remembrances and online guest book: http://www.roystonfh. com/obituaries/Peter... (Gainesville Times - Northern VA News)
Feb 3, 2016Peter Jay Chittick
Bachelor’s of Science, Military Engineering and his commission as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army in 1957. He and his family moved to Blacksburg, Virginia in 1978, where he attended the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He was honorably discharged as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1980 after 23 years of service to the United States that included two tours in Vietnam and tours of duty in Germany, Guatemala, and Panama. He rejoined the workforce in 1982 at EDS, SAIC and BDM, this time from a new home base in Middleburg, Virginia, where he continued to serve his country as a civilian. After failing to retire yet again, he returned to his local-delivery roots in service to the family-owned Middleburg Floral Gallery. He finally moved once more to Fredericksburg, VA in 2015. Peter was a Mason, a member of the Lion’s Club, the American Legion, a longtime supporter of the Ronald McDonald House, and made weekly deliveries for Seven Loaves Food Bank in Middleburg. He is survived by his wife of 51 years, the former Geraldine Hunt of Poughkeepsie, New York, and their four children; Shaun Chittick of Chesapeake, VA, Loreen Chittick Hitch of Glen Allen, VA, Jeri Lee Thomas of Reston, VA, Linda Beck of South Orange, NJ; and by 7 “damn smart’ grandchildren, and two brothers, Richard T. “Ted” and David Allen Chittick. Family and friends are invited to a memorial service on Friday, January 15 from 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Royston Funeral Home, 106 East Washington Street, Middleburg, Virginia and a reception and Celebration of Life, immediately following, from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm at Emmanuel Episcopal Reception Hall, directly across East Washington Street from the Funeral Home. An inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery will be held in 2016. In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation in Peter’s name to the Ronald McDonald House at... (Middleburg Eccentric)