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 Bangs, TX

Find local Bangs, Texas florists below that deliver beautiful flowers to residences, business, funeral homes and hospitals in Bangs 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.

Bangs Flower Shops

Bangs TX News

May 31, 2019

Elizabeth Olsen boho in loose linens she picks up Mother's Day flowers with boyfriend Robbie Arnett - Daily Mail

Robbie Arnett, in Sherman Oaks, CaliforniaShe remained fuss-free with her freshly washed chestnuts locks worn loose and with long bangs framing her face.The Godzilla actress stopped for a little refreshment amid running her errands, grabbing a coffee kerbside with her beau and pooch. The couple appeared to be deep in conversation as they supped on their iced-coffees. Iced-treat: The boho beauty wore a white T-shirt with stone MC Hammer-style pants alongside her beauRobbie, of band Milo Greene, was all in black and looked to be in charge of their black and white four-legged friend. Endgame is currently the second-biggest movie globally of all time with $2.48 billion, trailing behind only Avatar with $2.78 billion. She has her own spin-off WandaVision coming to Disney +, alongside Paul Bettany's Vision.

Jun 16, 2017

PATT RALL COLUMN: The scent of flowers waiting to be planted

June 10.• The city of Bemidji and Bemidji Community Theater are taking reservations for this year's Summer Theater Camp at BSU Bangsberg Fine and Performing Arts Complex June 5-16, Monday through Friday from 1 to 4 p.m. The choices are Level 1 Skill Building, Level 2 Advanced Performance Camp, Out of the Box and Tech Camp for those interested in backstage. Register on line at www.ci.bemidji.mn.us or call (218) 333-1850.• "Coming Home: Young Songwriters Workshop with Berit Dybing, Erlend Odnes Kelving, Caige Jambor and Cory Medina from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, June 17, at Headwaters School of Music and the Arts, 519 Minnesota Ave. NW. Registration is required and the cost of the workshop is $25. The workshop will be followed by an after-workshop showcase that will be open to the public from 6-9 p.m. Call Headwaters at 444-5606.• The Region 2 Arts Council is hosting a "Board Boot Camp," presented by MAP for Nonprofits, on Monday, June 26, from 9 a.m. to noon at the Northwest Minnesota Foundation in Bemidji. R2AC is offering this workshop to regional arts organizations' Boards of Directors at no cost. Board Boot Camp includes these outcomes: Discuss board member motivations for board service, Explore nonprofit life stages, understand the roles and responsibilities of board members, and Emerge with confidence and enthusiasm about board governance roles, according to a release. Jennifer Kramm from MAP for Nonprofits will be the presenter. They will be serving coffee and continental breakfast.• Intermediate Watercolor Workshop with Jane Freeman from noon to 4 p.m. on Thursday, June 23, at the Clearwater Life Center in Gonvick. The class is free, but bring your watercolors. Registration is required, call (218) 751 5447.• Book readers at Bemidji Public Library will meet at noon, on Monday, June 12. The group will discuss "Leaving Time" by Jodi Picoult.• First Friday Art Walk is getting a new look, including a new logo, that will be featured on flags, rack cards, window decals and posters that will appear in various Bemidji restaurants, hotels, and businesses. The new graphic work was accomplished by Hope Wall, a former BSU student.Patt Rall is a longtime arts supporter and journalist in Bemidji. She can be reached at prall@midco.net... (Bemidji Pioneer)

Apr 13, 2017

Making Mother's Day special in King's Lynn with flowers

Pictured above at the Fairyland trust Mother’s Day Workshop at Vancouver Quarter on Saturday, from left, are Elise Waajen, 6, Sarah Wise and Dave Bangs. MLNF17AF03248... (Lynn News - Lynn News)

Feb 3, 2017

BC Player of the Week: Knox City's Flowers wins honor

Kevin Hearne said. “I could not be prouder of him." 4. Jilian Hufstutler, guard, Jr., Comanche — Had a combined 36 points in two games against Bangs (36-29) and Brady (53-48). She ended the Bangs game with five rebounds, four assists, five steals, five blocks and 12 pass deflections. She charted six rebounds, six assists, three steals and three blocks against Brady. "Jilian has been a steady force in these first few games of district play,” Comanche coach Diana Salinas said. “She has been a great leader." 5. Creed Goode and Holden Senclair, guard/forward, Jr./Sr., Cross Plains— Goode charted a combined 29 points, 22 rebounds, four assists, two steals and two blocks in a loss to May (74-50) and a win over Santa Anna (66-34) — the latter of which saw him score 24. Senclair finished last week with 50 total points and 19 rebounds, including a monster double-double of 24 points and 13 boards in the Santa Anna win. The Buffaloes enter this week at 10-9 overall and 3-2 in district. 6. Dylan Frazier, post, So., Hawley— Posted a pair of double-doubles last week while leading the Bearcats to wins over Mason (65-55) and Anson (64-44). Frazier charted 10 points and 11 rebounds in the Mason win, and followed with 24 and 11 against Anson to help the Bearcats improve to 16-5 overall and 3-1 in league play. “Dylan does a great job of crashing the boards and playing with energy,” coach Chase Coulter said. 7. Noah Horn, guard, Jr., Stamford— Horn averaged 23 points last week, including 31 in a win over Anson that saw the Bulldogs improve to 14-8 overall and 3-1 in league play. Aren’t you glad I wasn’t amateurish enough to say that Noah flooded Anson with 31 points? 8. Tanner Broadfoot, forward, Sr., Clyde— Dropped 20 points on Stanton in last week’s 63-60 win over the Buffaloes that saw Clyde improve to 11-10. This included a game-winning 3-pointer as time expired. "Hard work in the gym is really paying off,” coach Tarrington Rivers said. “You have to run Tanner out of the gym after practice, and it shows." 9. Johnny Donnelly and Tanner Schnoor, 132- and 220-pound classes, Jr./So., Hawley— Both of these guys took their weight class at last week’s Abilene Invitational Meet. Donnelly took the top spot in the 132-pound division, with a three-lift total of 975 pounds. Schnoor totaled 1,360 to finish first at 220. "Tanner is an outstanding kid who's just as humble as he is strong,” Hawley coach Matt Preston said. “And he's pretty strong." 10. Brooke Jones, guard, Jr., Knox City— Had a combined 37 points through two games last week, including a 25-point, seven-assist, six-rebound effort against Harrold. 10B. Brooklyn Woodard and Taylor Beeson, post/guard, So./Sr., Stamford— The Lady Bulldogs swept Anson (42-31) and Hawley (81-70) in district play last week, with this pair providing nice numbers in both games. Woodard finished with a combined 47 points, 22 rebounds and 11 steals, while Beeson provided 33 points, 14 boards and four steals. 10C. Sheldon Burchett, guard, Sr., Jayton— Again demonstrated why he’s considered one of the area’s top all-around small-school athletes in wins over Valley (43-30) and Paducah (42-29). Burchett averaged 16 points and 10 rebounds last week, while hitting 46.7 percent from beyond the 3-point arc. 10D. Blaine Hughes and Corleone Pressley, guard/forward, seniors, Brownwood—... (ReporterNews.com)

Jan 8, 2016

Obama's tears for gun victims were real

And then the parade of faces, the sweet gap-toothed smiles and the wide eyes and the off-center parts and the jagged bangs, the freckles and the pug noses and the heartbreaking pain of promises shattered. I saw my nephew in those faces, a boy who carries my hopes and expectations and immense love with him on his shoulders (though he doesn't know it) into his own classroom every morning. Today he is 7, the age of those little martyred ones. Then, he was 4, and all I wanted to do was hold him tightly and block out the idea that children could be shot, point blank, and ripped from the world they'd only begun to explore. Sept. 11 filled me with pain and anger and a sense of insecurity that remains to this day in the deepest part of my consciousness, but did not make me question the existence of God. Sandy Hook made me wonder what kind of deity allows someone boy with a diseased mind shatter 26 lives and send the horrific ripples out among parents and siblings and spouses and children and friends. Sandy Hook, for some reason, was much more personal. To this day, I cannot shake the photos of those babies from my mind, class photos that captured these tiny miracles at the moment of their first blossoming. Is there anything more painful than looking at the photo of a smiling child, days and weeks and years after that child's sudden death? That is why I understand why President Obama wept this week when he talked about the victims of Sandy Hook. It is why I believe those tears were real, and not conjured for a photo-op to advance a lame-duck political agenda. It is why I know that this most unemotional of men broke down, even briefly, in front of the cameras. And it is why I was angered by the reaction from friends and fellow travelers on the conservative side who ridiculed him, or challenged the authenticity of his feelings, or piled on with analogies of other deaths Barack Obama had failed to sufficiently mourn. I read social media posts telling me that I was a naïve fool to think that a man who presumably had no concern for the family of border agent Brian Terry could genuinely care about dead 7-year-olds. I was told that a man who allowed one of his ambassadors to be massacred in cold blood by jihadists, and not cry over his shed blood, could not empathize with the parents of Sandy Hook. I was warned not to fall for the dog-and-pony show served up for the anti-gun crowd. Finally, I was bombarded with legal treatises as to why the president's executive orders addressing gun control were (1) unconstitutional, (2) unworkable or (3) unnecessary, because they duplicated much of what was already written into existing legislation. I happen to agree that the executive orders probably will not hold up if challenged in a ... (Philly.com)

Jan 8, 2016

San Jose: Woman killed by former renter after hostage standoff, authorities say

Acevedo standing out front, holding the gun at his right side, with a helmeted officer trained on him. In the ensuing moments, several loud bangs were heard -- apparently from flash-bang grenades -- followed by the sound of gunshots. Police said Acevedo opened fire, and one of the officers, an SJPD veteran, fired a shot in return and fatally wounded the suspect. At the end of the confrontation, which lasted just seconds, the gunman was pronounced dead at the scene. A separate unnamed officer, described as a 12-year department member, suffered a graze wound and was treated at a hospital. He is expected to survive. Officers searched the home after the shooting and found the body of Najera, dead from a gunshot wound, police said. San Jose Police say a man took a woman hostage at 4400 Camden Ave in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 9, 2015. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) The officer who fired his weapon has been placed on paid administrative leave as an investigation is launched in conjunction with the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office, which is routine in officer-involved shootings. It is the city's 10th such shooting this year, and the sixth fatal incident. It also marked San Jose's 26th homicide of 2015. At this time last year there were 31 homicides. A search of court records did not show any criminal history for Acevedo in the county for at least the past decade. Anyone with information about the case can contact Detective Sgt. Pat Guire or Detective Ken Tran at 408-277-5283 or leave a tip with Silicon Valley Crime Stoppers at 408-947-STOP (7867) or with svcrimestoppers.org. Staff writer Katie Nelson contributed to this report. Contact Robert Salonga at 408-920-5002. Follow him at Twitter.com/robertsalonga. (San Jose Mercury News)