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 Vidalia, GA

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

Vidalia Flower Shops

Buddy's Florist

202 Ne Main St
Vidalia, GA 30474
(912) 537-8801

Cottage Garden Inc

601 Church Street
Vidalia, GA 30474
(912) 537-8476

Ellis' Florist & Gift Shoppe

201 Nw Main
Vidalia, GA 30474
(912) 538-1116

Pearl Price Florist

407 Durden St
Vidalia, GA 30474
(912) 537-7667

Southern Creations

506 Jackson Street
Vidalia, GA 30474
(912) 538-9270

Vidalia GA News

Jul 26, 2018

Stinky 'corpse flower' in full bloom at Michigan garden

Steve LaWarre, Meijer Gardens' horticulture director. Visitors have described the odour as similar to rotten Vidalia onions and mice in an old gym bag.Corpse flowers, typically found in Indonesia and Sumatra, are the largest flowering structures in the world, said Wendy Overbeck, the gardens' horticulture manager. "Putricia" stands at 4.5 feet (1.4 metres) tall.The flower attracts pollinators during its bloom through its potent smell, deep maroon colour and heat emissions, Overbeck said."It's just something really exciting that I hope people will enjoy, or maybe not enjoy because of the smell. I've been calling it a ‘beautiful stink,"‘ LaWarre said. "I hope a lot of people get the chance to experience it."The flower will stay open for only a few days. It's expected to completely close by the end of Saturday. 'He had the right to return home safe': Carmont Construction fined... Delays on College Drive expected due to water valve repairs ...

Feb 3, 2016

Area Deaths

Remembrances may be given to Springfield United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 237, Springfield, Ga. 31329 or Paul Anderson Youth Home, P.O. Box 525 Vidalia, Ga. 30475. Thomas C. Strickland & Sons Funeral Home, Effingham Chapel was in charge of arrangements. Elaine M. Batty RINCON — Elaine M. Batty, 72, passed away Sunday, Jan. 24, 2016 at Hospice Savannah. She fought a courageous battle with Ovarian Cancer for over two years. Born in Fairhaven, Mass., she was the daughter of Manual and Emily Mello Jr. Elaine graduated from Fairhaven High School in 1961. She was married June 6, 1964 and moved South. Elaine worked in several positions in her career, including executive secretary, secretary to the principal of a Catholic elementary school, and auto dealership bookkeeper. She... (Savannah Morning News)

Jan 8, 2016

Fall Dean's List released

Amanda E. McKeny, John Joseph Moore, Reagan Lane Norwood, Cassandra Q. Rosser.  Brandon - Ellen Christian.  Brooklyn - Trey P. Grice, Virginia Vidalia Lee.  Carriere - Lauren E. Abercrombie, Kail Brian Al-Jabi, Danny Joe Amacker, Patrick Joseph Beasley, Brandon G. Burchett, Dustin Castleberry, Collene Michelle Collier, Alexis Brooke Cooper, George Drennan, Nathaniel L. Dutton, Gary R. Easterling, Joshua M. Fayard, Allison R. Fuller, Alyssa N. Fuller, Chantel R. Garcia, Jason Ryan Gibson, Joshua Wade Gill, Bradley Thomas Guillot, Alyssa M. Holifield, Hunter Blake Holston, Kassidi T. Hope, Hannah Marie Ingram, Lyne Rita Louise Krieger, Morgan E. Lee, Karen Margarita Lopez, Bailey S. Metzler, Andrea Hope Miley, Sabrina L. Miller, Keith R. Mitchell, Courtney Nicole Morris, James D. Moseley, Megan E. Nunez, Brian C. Oliver, Will Garrett Owens, Ishtar V. Rosario, Jake Robert Scheuermann, Georgie Madison Sessions, Blair E. Seymour, Christian L. Smith, Kristin T. Smith, Kaila S. Spence, Arnold R. Spiers, Haley N. Watkins, Anthony Joseph Williams.  Carthage - Shelby Leeann Odom.  Collins - Jerome Flowers, Evan Prince Thornton.  Columbia - Damon Baisden, Angel R. Bass, William A. Boutwell, Jacob Freeman Burkett, Desiniqua G. Collins, Ashley E. Creel, Jacob A. Dees, Parker J. Dungan, Shannon Michelle Fortenberry, Bailey D. Giles, Tabitha Hendricks, Miranda L. James, Zaquoria Danea Jefferson, Jacquii R. Johnson, Rashawn J. Johnson, Hannah Elizabeth Landrum, Bethany N. Leming, Aaron L. McKenzie, Jonathan S. Mobley, Leah Rebekah Pierce, Leshecka L. Rawls, Brian A. Rogers, Shawn W. Shepard, Alexander Ann Smith, Jelisa K. Stewart, Cody Randall Trigg.  Diamondhead - Lena Marie Cornwell, Ximing Liao, Noah Kyle Nicaud, Lauren M. Poncet, Clinton C. Saucier, James Ryan Saucier, Blake Anthony Sprouse, Hannah A. Steele-Laureys.  Ellisville - Olivia B. Pitts.  Florence - Michael Johnathon Skaggs.  Flowood - Michael Travis Racey... (WDAM-TV)

Dec 30, 2015

Warm December weather confuses even the flowers

Boston The city hit 66 degrees just after 11:30 a.m., smashing the previous record of 61 for the day. Donati, who owns Vidalias restaurant in Beverly and a farmstand in Manchester-by-the-Sea, has swapped stories of concern with customers and friends still harvesting outdoor lettuce, broccoli, and cauliflower. “That’s very unusual,” Donati said. Jason Goodall, a Methuen floral designer, said the green leaves on his irises, a perennial spring favorite, are already 4 inches highand still growing. A week ago, he picked a couple of berries off a strawberry plant tucked into a warm corner of his yard. Suzanne Kreiter/Globe staff Cherry trees in the Public Garden displayed their blossoms. “The perennial flowers I am not as worried about. They can bloom and go dormant much more easily,” Goodall said. Trees are a different matter, he said. If they flower now, they might be unable to put on their springtime show. “The lilacs are full of buds,” Goodall said. “It’s as if we skipped ahead to April.” Perhaps one of the showiest displays of floral defiance is in Boston’s Public Garden, where several Higan cherry trees are full of blooms. “It’s slightly terrifying that this is blooming so early,” said Chelsea Mertz, a tourist from Chicago, who wondered about the implications of such out-of-season petals on the cherry trees. “I can enjoy this warmth, but this tree thinks it’s April.” Carol Simpson, a Beacon Hill resident who was photographing one of the cherry trees, said she has witnessed them blooming out of sync before. But it was the bees swarming around the blossoms that took her aback. “The squirrels, the bees, everything is freaked out by this,” Simpson said. Not to worry, said Norm Helie, an applied plant and soil scientist who guides tree and plant care for the Friends of the Public Garden, a citizens group that helps the city care for trees and plants in the garden and on Boston Common and the Commonwealth Avenue Mall. He said he has seen the P...