Florists in Yonkers, NY
Find local Yonkers, New York florists below that deliver beautiful flowers to residences, business, funeral homes and hospitals in Yonkers 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.
Yonkers Flower Shops
540 Nepperhan Ave Ste 540
Yonkers, NY 10701
(914) 980-9979
720 Yonkers Ave
Yonkers, NY 10704
(914) 968-6005
1571 Central Park Avenue
Yonkers, NY 10710
(914) 961-8470
695 Yonkers Ave
Yonkers, NY 10704
(914) 375-7733
414 S. Broadway
Yonkers, NY 10705
(914) 963-3300
106 Elm Street
Yonkers, NY 10701
(914) 751-2268
Yonkers NY News
Apr 4, 2021Ridge Hill Has Spring Fever: Flowers and Activities Reopening - Patch.com
YONKERS, NY — With the LEGOLAND Discovery Center and Rockin' Jump rock climbing center reopening this weekend, the Ridge Hill shopping center has decided it's a perfect time to spruce up for a little spring refreshing.The open-air mall has added brand new patio furniture, picnic tables with oversized white umbrellas and even a few ping pong tables. Ridge Hill groundskeepers planted over 100,000 flower bulbs last fall. The hard work is only now paying off with a colorful array of tulips and daffodils. The spring flowers are expected to be a centerpiece of the promenades for just a few more weeks - the giant bunny-shaped trimmed topiaries in the gardens will last a bit longer. In addition to reopening activities, a new Cajun restaurant named Storming Crab will be celebrating its grand opening with a special spring menu. To celebrate the season, parking at Ridge Hill is currently free for shoppers. Here are just a few of the activities now open at Ridge Hill: Storming Crab is now open.Leg...
Dec 10, 2020Unique Business Forms Partnership with Ronald McDonald House, Beyond Flowers and Food - HamletHub
Beyond Flowers and Food as a Covid Hero of the Day for donating 30 of their “Send to Thank a Frontline Hero” packages to ICU nurses in Yonkers. Beyond Flowers and Food is donating a portion of their sales for the entire month of December to Ronald McDonald House for their End of Year Giving Campaign.
Founded in 2019 by Katie Cadman and Beth Turner, Beyond Flowers and Food came out of theirown grief after losing their mother suddenly to cancer. In the days and weeks that followed herdeath, the sisters were inundated with flowers and catered food which they appreciated butseemed impersonal and generic to them. In the years that followed when they wanted toreciprocate and support a friend or family member that was struggling they found there were nogifting solutions available and so their business was born.
The mission at Beyond Flowers and Food is to offer unique and thoughtful gift packages forlife’s toughest times and similarly Ronald McDonald House provides a home-away-from homefor families when they need it the most. The team at Ronald McDonald House has used theservices of Beyond Flowers and Food to send thoughtful gifts to families who have lost a childand understands the value of what they offer. As strategic partners both businesses will crosspromote through their websites, email marketing and social media channels. “This partnership isperfect for both parties and the mission of Beyond Flowers and Food directly aligns with ourshere at Ronald McDonald House,” said Christina Riley, Executive Director at RMHGHV “We
are thrilled to form this partnership and know that many of our families can benefit from thesymbolic and insp...
Feb 27, 2020Get Ready for May Flowers With These Floral-Patterned Items - Westchester Magazine
Book Shop, Bronxvillewww.womrath.com
White floral three-drawer chest
Bring the outside in with this statement dresser.
$399.95; Pier 1, Yonkers
Kate Spade blossom-flounce anorak
Brighten up a spring day with this adorable jacket.
$286, Kate Spade, White Plains
Shelley Kyle Velvet Rose oud perfume
Looking like a rose not your thing? Embrace floral by smelling like one.
$72, STILE Fashion Home, Armonkwww.stileny.com
...
Nov 9, 2019Publisher Ralph A. Martinelli dies at 57 - Westfair Online
Martinelli
Martinelli died from complications of a previous medical procedure, according to a family member. He was one of six sons of former Yonkers Mayor Angelo Martinelli, who served six terms from 1974 to 1987. Ralph A. Martinelli was a graduate of Iona Prep School and majored in communications at Regis College in Denver.
In a 2012 column appearing in Hudson Valley magazine, Martinelli reminisced about his father having started that publication in 1972. He said he had fond memories of working at the family’s printing plant in Yonkers, Gazette Press, which had been in operation since the late 1940s. He recalled that his father would take him and his brothers to the printing plant on School Street near Getty Square every Saturday where they would do everything from sweeping the floors to working on print jobs. He said that he eventually worked his way up to the bindery department.
Even after graduating from college, he still helped out at the printing plant. He said he worked at a few restaurants and eventually got a real estate license, but was drawn back to Hudson Valley magazine, becoming involved with circulation and eventually becoming its advertising manager.
His brother Robert F. Martinelli is CEO and president of Today Media, while his brother Richard J. Martinelli is the company’s secretary and treasurer.
Westchester County Executive George Latimer said, “Martinelli grew ...
May 31, 2019The great mystery of flowering plants by the roadside - The Riverdale Press
Fortunately, there is a small public parking lot conveniently located at Farragut Avenue in Yonkers with about 16 parking spaces. From the parking lot, you can pick up a trail — South County Trailway — suitable either for walking or biking.
My main concern was the poison ivy that also grows profusely along Farragut Avenue.
That being said, the wild flowers I was anxious to photograph were blooming en masse, north and south of the parking area, creating a glowing field of white.
I stepped out of the car fully expecting to see Queen Anne’s lace, which grows everywhere in neglected open space. Examining an individual plant, I could see a multitude of tiny white flowers forming a canopy-like structure resembling an umbrella over the stalk. This type of flower structure is named an “umbel.”
Queen Anne’s lace does have an umbellar structure, but the flower I was examining was not right. I, therefore, took several pictures, particularly of the leaves and flowers, and sent an e-mail to the plant identification desk at the New York Botanical Garden.
The garden offers many services to the public, and is available for identification questions by phone — (718) 817-8604 — or by e-mail (plantinfo@nybg.org). When I am in need of an identification, I usually send them an e-mail with attached photos of the plant in question along with whatever pertinent information I can add, including where the plant was found, moisture conditions, lighting conditions, and dates of blooming.
I usually get an answer back within a few days. The photos I sent off showed an individual plant, massed flowers and the leaves.
When a provisional answer came back — provisional because the professional manning that desk was on vacation — it said that it was definitely not Queen Anne’s lace, suggesting instead that it might be sweet cicely (Myrrhis odorata). Then I received a follow-up e-mail suggesting it might be poison hemlock (Conium m...
Aug 17, 2018Paint Night: Color of Flowers
Cost
Tickets: $20; Members $15.
Location
View map
Hudson River Museum511 Warburton AvenueYonkers, NY
Additional Information
Neighborhood:
Yonkers
We make every effort to ensure the accuracy of this information. However, you should always call ahead to confirm dates, times, location, and other information.