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Vote for finalists in ‘Petals to the Metal’ classic car and truck photo contest

We’ve chosen the five finalists in our “Petals to the Metal” classic car and truck photo contest.
Now the voting public gets to drive the contest home.
889_Handful_of_Happiness_2
Through Oct. 23, visitors to www.royers.com/contest can vote  – once daily – for one of five classic cars. The owner of the winning entry, to be announced the week of Oct. 28, will receive free flowers for one year.
Everyone who votes will receive a “buy one, get one free” coupon for loose bouquets, similar to the one on the left, redeemable in-store only through Nov. 30.
The finalists are:

  • Grover Amspacher, Dover, 1967 Plymouth Satellite/GTX
  • Vern Auker, Marietta, 1929 Ford A five-window coupe
  • Jessica Goss, Dover, 1968 Chevy Camaro SS
  • Heather Gross, Spring Grove, 1967 Chevy Chevelle
  • Dotty Rhoades, Pequea, 1949 Plymouth special deluxe

Petals to the Metal is inspired by Royer’s 1969 Ford Econoline delivery van, which is on display at the company’s flagship store in Lebanon.

Homecoming flower trends: Royer’s visits Fox 43

 

Fox 43's Heather Warner with Barry Spengler of Royer's.
Fox 43’s Heather Warner with Barry Spengler of Royer’s.

Fox 43 Morning News’ Heather Warner figures she has a decade until she has to worry about homecoming dances in her household.
But she talked about current homecoming flower trends this morning as she welcomed Barry Spengler of Royer’s to Fox 43’s York studio.
“The newest thing this year … the guys are getting flowers when they ask the lady to the homecoming dance,” he said.
He noted that Royer’s Carlisle store had seen 20 to 25 young men (or in some cases, their mothers) come in to buy flowers in advance of asking girls out. Handing Warner a hand-held rose bouquet, Barry said: “I think it’s one of those things when you ask somebody, you hand them something, it takes the anxiety out of it.”
Warner said: “You can’t say no if they present this, can you?”
Barry quipped, “It’s almost bribery.”
Warner: “I think so. That would have made it awfully tough” to say no.
Other trends Barry touched on:

Rings

Barry eased a ring corsage onto the right hand of Warner, who marveled:
“The day of the corsage with the little rubber band are gone. Very cool.”

Bracelets

Barry demonstrated a snap bracelet on Warner’s arm, explaining where the corsage attaches.
“A lot of the seniors, it’s their last homecoming, they’re saying, ‘I want a little keepsake after the dance,’ ” Barry said. “So they’re getting something in a bracelet like that for after the fact … . And even little trinkets; there’s little butterflies that you can save for after the fact, too.”

Bling

“There is no wrong with bling,” Barry said. “Anything with color, pop, snap. Bright is the thing.”
For instance, he offered a silver bracelet with dendrobium orchids and jewels. Another bracelet featured orange flowers and acorns — to go with a camouflage dress.
“Now, anything goes,” Barry said. “Just don’t get anxiety over the flowers. Just get what you think works.”
Click here to watch the entire segment.
 
 

Royer’s Kids Club event on Oct. 26 will collect new children’s books for public libraries

The final Royer’s Kids Club event of 2013 combines “boos” and bouquets.
Small mum basket
In all Royer’s stores on Oct. 26, children ages 5 to 12 will have an opportunity to make a small mum basket and will receive a free balloon.
The event will celebrate Halloween and our annual “Bouquets for Books” book drive to benefit area public libraries. Participants are asked to bring a new children’s book as the price of admission.
Time slots are available at 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m.
Registration is required by calling your nearest Royer’s store. Click here for locations and contact information.
For more information about Royer’s Kids Club, visit www.royers.com/kidsclub.

‘Petals to the Metal’ classic car contest at halfway mark

If you want to win free flowers for a year, you’d better step on the gas and enter our “Petals to the Metal” contest.

Here's one of the entries we've already received. The deadline for submissions is Oct. 14.
Here’s one of the entries we’ve already received. The deadline for submissions is Oct. 14.

We’re at the halfway point as entries are due by Oct. 14.
Inspired by Royer’s 1969 Ford Econoline delivery van, we want to see what other cool classic cars and trucks can be found in the garages of Berks, Cumberland, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon and York counties. The person who submits the winning photo will be rewarded with a fresh bouquet every month of 2014.
It’s simple to enter the contest. Just fill out the details and upload a photo of your car or truck at www.royers.com/contest.
Five finalists will be selected and put up for a public vote on royers.com from Oct. 16-23.
Everyone who votes will receive a “buy one, get one free” coupon for loose bouquets, redeemable in-store only through Nov. 30. The winner will be announced the week of Oct. 28.

Royer’s donates candles for Mental Illness Awareness Week vigil in Carlisle

The Cumberland/Perry Community Support Program will hold a candlelight vigil at 6:30 p.m. Friday on the steps of the Old Cumberland County Courthouse as part of its celebration of Mental Illness Awareness Week, Oct. 6-12.

Candle
Photo: Arivumathi/Wikicommons

Royer’s, which has a store at 100 York Road, Carlisle, donated 200 candles for the vigil, which will feature Dennis Marion, deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, inspirational stories of mental health recovery and entertainment.
For more information about this and other Mental Illness Awareness Week activities, click here.
 

Win flowers for a year in ‘Petals to the Metal’ classic car and truck photo contest

There are classic flowers and classic automobiles. And they’re coming together for Royer’s “Petals to the Metal” classic car and truck photo contest.
The event is inspired by Royer’s 1969 Ford Econoline delivery van, which is on display at our flagship store in Lebanon.


In the meantime, we want to see what other cool classic cars and trucks can be found in the garages of Berks, Cumberland, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon and York counties. The best photo will be worth free flowers for a year – a fresh bouquet every month of 2014.
It’s simple to enter the contest. Just take a picture of you and your car and upload it to www.royers.com/contest. Be sure to include your name, phone number, address and a little bit about the car or truck: make, model, year, in particular, but also any other details you’d like to share, such as how and when you acquired it, pamper it, drive it.
The deadline for entries is Oct. 14. Five finalists will be selected and put up for a public vote on royers.com from Oct. 16-23.
Everyone who votes will receive a “buy one, get one free” coupon for loose bouquets, redeemable in-store only through Nov. 30.
The winner will be announced the week of Oct. 28.

Just two months until ‘Bouquets for Books’ book drive

Bouquets for Books logo for web or interactive piecesMake a mental bookmark for Nov. 1-9.
That’s when our annual “Bouquets for Books” book drive returns to collect new children’s books for area public libraries.
It’s really simple – and rewarding – for you to help out.
Just bring a new book to any of our stores during the event, and you will receive a free bouquet (up to three bouquets per family per visit, while supplies last).
In its seven-year history, Bouquets for Books has collected more than 10,000 books for the libraries.

Royer’s exclusive: Corazon rose

 
Corazon_on_black
The poet and writer Gertrude Stein was wrong.
A rose is a rose is a rose, she said.
If she meant to suggest that all roses are alike, then she was wrong.
We’d like to introduce you to the Corazon rose. It’s unlike any other rose we sell. Don’t get us wrong, we love them all, no matter the variety. But they aren’t one and the same.
Which is why it’s going to take some educating in order for our customers to appreciate what sets Corazon apart from other rose varieties.
First, let’s start with the name: Corazon. It’s pronounced coh-rah-SOHN, and it means “heart” in Spanish.
Corazon only comes in red.
It is grown in Quito, Ecuador, high in the Andes Mountains, approximately 2,800 miles south of Harrisburg.
But a lot of flowers are grown in Quito, including other varieties of roses.
So what’s special about Corazon?
• Its bloom opens fully, like a garden rose
• Its bloom is extra large: almost 5 inches across
• Its petals re-curl at the margins, giving Corazon a classic look
• It lasts a long time: seven days given proper care.
Corazon was a blue-ribbon winner at the Society of American Florists’ most recent convention.
What’s more, Corazon is exclusive to Royer’s. No other florist in our market area can carry Corazon.
Tom Royer, our senior vice president and chief operating officer, has been making regular trips to flower farms in South America for decades. You’d expect that it takes a lot to impress him, right?
Color him impressed – the color red, of course – when it comes to Corazon.

“Number one, it’s the head size,” Tom said. “They’re incredible. The color is just absolutely gorgeous. And it looks like you cut the rose out of your garden.
“It’s all about the characteristics of the rose. Even though it opens quickly, it lasts a long time. I was shocked how long.”

Of course, what gives Corazon its unique appeal also makes for a unique challenge in getting customers to embrace it.
“It’s a test for us,” Tom said. “It’s exciting because it’s a different type of rose. Hopefully it will go really well and people will be mad at us because we don’t have enough of them.”
 

Schreiber Pediatric teen camp visits Royer’s corporate complex


We were thrilled to be a stop once again for Schreiber Pediatric Rehab Center‘s teen camp, which provides participants with an opportunity to work on social skills and learn life skills during outings in the community.
The children toured much of Royer’s corporate complex in Lebanon on Aug. 22. The teen camp has visited Royer’s for the past several years.
“Our thanks to Royer’s for helping us make this happen,” said Jay Graver, Schreiber’s director of educational services.
Based in Lancaster County, Schreiber offers outpatient physical, occupational and speech-language therapy to children with 
disabilities, developmental delays and acquired injuries.
 

Kids club members celebrate summer, look ahead to Oct. 26 event

Nat King Cole gave us “Those Lazy Hazy Crazy Days of Summer.”
The Royer’s Kids Club added “daisy” to the rhyming pattern with its Aug. 17 event. Available in each of our stores, the free event gave children ages 5 to 12 an opportunity to make a Sweet Summer Daisy Bowl arrangement.
The kids club’s final 2013 event is on Oct. 26, when all stores will celebrate Halloween and our annual “Bouquets for Books” book drive to benefit local libraries. We’ll provide more details in the weeks to come.