2 Dozen Roses - $44.95
Yellow Roses indicate Friendship and Joy. With this selection you receive two dozen elegantly wrapped Premium Long Stem Yellow Roses (18"-24"), with Filler Greens, a personalized card, and rose care information. Your order is wrapped in decorative cellophane and carefully hand packed on ice in an attractive, fully insulated gift box, and shipped via Overnight Courier.
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Bold & Beautiful - $36.95 This boldly colored bouquet is sure to fit any occasion! Six Mixed Roses along with three bright Gerbera Daisies and three stems of Mixed Asiatic Lilies are accented with greenery and will brighten any decor. Also included are a quality message card, floral preservative and flower care information. Your flowers come elegantly wrapped in a decorative sleeve and are hand packed in an attractive gift box.
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Bountiful Basket - $79.95 Soft pink roses nestle with lilies and other dainty blossoms to create this abundant garden basket bouquet. This all-around arrangement is approximately 13 inches h x 12 inches w.
Based on season and availability this selection may contain: Roses, Veronica, Stock, Lilies, Candy Tuft, Thistle, Curly Willow, Fox Fern, Pittosporum.
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Click Here to send flowers to someone in New Mexico
Send Flowers to anyone in New Mexico
including friends and family in any one of these cities:
New Mexico
Population: 1,819,046
Date Of Statehood: December 18, 1787
Capitol: Santa Fe
Slogan: Land of Enchantment
Nickname: Granite State
Motto: Crescit eundo. It grows as it goes
Web Site: http://www.state.nm.us/
State Flower: Yucca flower Yucca glauca

The yucca was adopted as the State Flower on March 14, 1927. The yucca is a member of the lily family and a symbol of sturdiness as well as beauty. In the early summer, pale ivory flowers bloom at the tips of its long, fibrous stalks. At the base of the plant are broad, sharpedged leaves that look like stilettos. The yucca sometimes grows to the height of a small tree.
Gardening in New Mexico
  The New Mexico State University College of Agriculture and Home Economics ( www.nmsu.edu )offers a tremendous resource for gardeners and horticulture professionals in the New Mexico area. For just one example, they provide plant lists and advice for low water use gardening.
weather.nmsu.edu/AbqPlantList/index.htm
  Historically, students of New Mexico State University are called Aggies because New Mexico State University started out as primarily an agricultural school. They first opened their doors in 1888 and were long known as the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.
Now New Mexico State University is a major university, offering undergraduate and graduate programs and conducting important research in a wide range of fields.
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