Rouvalis Flowers & Gardens | Boston & Winchester Flower Delivery & Boutique

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Top 3 Spots in Boston for fall foliage

Sean MurphyComment

It's sad to see the summer drawing to a close, but there is much to look forward to in the coming months! In fact, Autumn is one of the very best times to visit our fair city.  Crisp sunny days in New England seem made for Apple picking, cider donuts and taking in the beauty of the changing leaves. Bold reds, brilliant oranges and vibrant yellows are but a few of the shades you'll be treated to on a fall foliage tour and you wont even need to leave the city to take it all in! Here we've shared with you our top three favorite spots to see the season change in Boston:  

1. The Boston Public Garden 

This exceptionally beautiful park right in the heart of Boston is the place to view a large variety of tree species.  

This exceptionally beautiful park right in the heart of Boston is the place to view a large variety of tree species.  

2. The Esplanade 

A stroll or bike ride along the esplanade is a great way to spend a fall afternoon taking in the colors and getting a little exercise! 

A stroll or bike ride along the esplanade is a great way to spend a fall afternoon taking in the colors and getting a little exercise! 

3. Beacon Hill

We've saved the very best for last! Ok so we're a little biased, but wander through the cobble stone, lamplit streets of Beacon Hill on a cool fall evening and see if it doesn't become one of your absolute favorite places too!

We've saved the very best for last! Ok so we're a little biased, but wander through the cobble stone, lamplit streets of Beacon Hill on a cool fall evening and see if it doesn't become one of your absolute favorite places too!

Succulent Special!

Sean MurphyComment

This week we have a special on Succulents in a pot for $20.00 We have a variety of succulents in either white or grey pots.

This deal is only while supplies last. Come on in and pick one up for your house or as a gift!

Dutch floral celebration

Sean MurphyComment

 

This passed weekend, flower lovers traveled to a small Dutch town called Zundert for the Bloemencorso Zudert, a day long party celebrating the town’s famous dahlias. The tradition dates back 80-some years, and while the parade may have started out as a relatively modest display of flower-adorned bicycles and horse-drawn carts, it’s since become something crazier and more surreal, involving massive floats covered in hundreds of thousands of flowers. Over the course of the first week of September, float-makers bustle about trying to complete their highly detailed displayed in time for the annual parade, and they can get crazy. Between the moving parts, the intricate designs, the yearly themes and the speed with which the floats are assembled, the Bloemencorso Zundert is as much a celebration of wild invention as it is the Netherlands’ dahlias.




 

Fall Plantings

Sean MurphyComment

It's that time of year again when we begin to re-invigorate our window boxes and container gardens for the fall season. If you're looking for lush full window boxes bursting with life then look no further! The Garden Design team at Rouvalis Flowers is a highly skilled group that has been providing the homes of Beacon Hill with outstanding window adornments for decades. Each window box is designed, planted and maintained with the utmost attention to detail and commitment to  the satisfaction of our customers. We especially love outdoor plantings for the Autumn, as it is the time of year for some of natures most ornate and colorful plants and decorative vegetation.  

Here we've adorned a clients front entry way with a collection of ornamental pumpkins, gourds, dried branches and natural preserved autumn leaves.  

Here we've adorned a clients front entry way with a collection of ornamental pumpkins, gourds, dried branches and natural preserved autumn leaves.  

Fall Bulb Planting

Sean MurphyComment
  • In the fall, you'll find bulbs to purchase just about anywhere! Make sure you buy your bulbs from a reputable nursery or garden center,. Second-rate bulbs product second-rate flowers or don't sprout at all.
  • Plant anytime before the ground freezes. For the New England area I would suggest anytime before November.
  • See the chart below for type of bulbs by hardiness zone. .
  • Ideally, plant your bulbs soon after you purchase them.
  • Select a site with lots of sun and well-drained soil. Work a few inches of compost in the soil.
  • Plant bulbs generously just in case some do not sprout. And plant them in random order and spacing for a more natural appearance. If you love groves of daffodils and blanketed landscapes of tulips, be prepared to buy and plant a large quantity of bulbs!
  • In general, plant bulbs at a depth of three times the width of the bulb.
  • After planting, apply fertilizer low in nitrogen, such as a 9-6-6 formulation.  If your soil's sandy, plant bulbs slightly deeper; in clay soils, slightly shallower.
  • Water well after planting. Apply mulch to keep the weeds down and hold in moisture.
  • Do you have voles or chipmunks? Consider planting your bulbs in a “cage” fashioned with chicken wire.

"Flower Power" Photographer Marc Riboud Dies

Sean Murphy1 Comment

A legendary French's m photojournalists, Marc Riboud, whose 1967 snap of a protester confronting US soldiers with a flower captured the movement against the Vietnam war, has died aged 93.

Riboud, equally famed for a 1953 picture of a workman painting the Eiffel Tower high above the Paris skyline, passed away Tuesday after a long illness, a family member told AFP.

A master of black-and-white imagery, Riboud joined the prestigious Magnum agency at the invitation of its founders, photography greats Henri-Cartier Bresson and Robert Capa.

Riboud, whose shots appeared in top magazines such as Look, Life, Stern and Paris Match, was among the handful of photographers who managed to enter North Vietnam in the late 1960s.