The drive to Pueblo is always farther than it looks on the map. You meant to be there for the birthday, the surgery, the funeral, the Sunday lunch a month ago, and the calendar got the better of you again. You order flowers because you cannot be there in person, which is most of what flowers are for. Pueblo is one of those cities where the adult children left for work in Denver or the Springs decades ago and the parents stayed put. The wait between placing the order and seeing the confirmation come through is the part nobody warns you about. This page exists to make that wait shorter, the order itself less of a guess, and the destination less of a black box.
The Diocese of Pueblo sits on North Greenwood Street and oversees the Catholic parishes across southern Colorado. Most Pueblo funerals open with a velorio the evening before the Mass, not the morning of the service, and that moves the timing on flowers more than people expect when they call from out of town. You are not sending for one event. You are sending for two, and the wake is first.
Flowers from under $60 with $16.95 flat delivery. Same-day cutoff is 1PM weekdays and 10AM Saturdays. Call 800-946-5457 if you want to talk it through.
Florist Guidance
Joan, NCCPF Certified Florist · 30 years on the bench · 40,000+ arrangements · about our team
Pueblo runs hotter and drier than the rest of the Colorado pages I look at on this site. The July average sits near ninety-five degrees, the air carries about twenty percent humidity on a normal afternoon, and the altitude is just under five thousand feet. That combination strips moisture from petals faster than almost anywhere else in the state. A hydrangea on a south-facing porch in August is finished before dinner. Roses that give a recipient in Denver nine days give a Pueblo recipient four if they sit out in afternoon sun. The stems I steer callers toward in summer are carnations and chrysanthemums. They were built for this weather. Hydrangeas, sweet peas, anything with thin petal tissue, those need to come inside before the door closes.
The second lever I look at on Pueblo orders is where the stems are coming from and how far they have had to travel. Most of the network here sources Colorado workhorse stems through Denver and the Front Range corridor, then pulls in Colombian and Ecuadorian product for roses, alstroemeria, and chrysanthemums. Longer truck routes through hot weather mean refrigerated space and tight cold-chain habits matter more than they would in a milder coastal city. If a caller wants a premium rose-heavy piece at the peak of summer, I will say yes, but I will also say we should build around hardy stems that can carry the arrangement once the vase leaves the air conditioning.
The other thing I deal with constantly on Pueblo calls is the velorio. Close to half the city is Hispanic or Latino, and the Diocese of Pueblo at 101 N Greenwood oversees the Catholic parishes across the southern part of the state. Most funerals here begin with a wake the evening before the Mass. Flowers for that wake need to arrive at the funeral home by late afternoon, not the morning of the service. When somebody calls and says a relative has passed and they want to send flowers, the first question I ask is which day the velorio falls on. Romero Family on Cleveland Street, Davis Mortuary on Broadway, Roselawn off Roselawn Road, Angelus Chapel on Evans Avenue. The timing matters more than the arrangement itself.
The hospitals are the third thing I walk callers through. Parkview Medical at 400 West 16th Street and St. Mary-Corwin at 1008 Minnequa Avenue. The Dorcy Cancer Center sits inside the St. Mary-Corwin building, and that floor does not accept flowers. Immunocompromised patients, fungal spore risk, the same protocol you find at every comprehensive cancer center in the country. A caller saying their mother is at St. Mary-Corwin is not always sending to a floor where flowers are accepted. I ask which floor before the order goes to the bench. One question changes the whole order.
And then there is November first and second, which is its own category. Día de los Muertos. Marigolds, orange and yellow, to Roselawn Cemetery and Mountain View Cemetery where the families visit. Nothing white, nothing sympathy-coded. This is celebration. The cempasúchil is the flower that helps the deceased find their way back. Callers who ask whether orange and yellow is the right palette for a Mexican-American family member they lost three years ago can stop asking. It is exactly right.
Same-day cutoff
1PM weekdays, 10AM Saturdays
Or call 800-946-5457
Our NC office, Mon-Fri
Pueblo's flower demand sits in three buckets that almost no other city in the Colorado batch shares in the same proportions. Sympathy leads, with the velorio tradition setting the timing. Care home and hospital deliveries follow, because Pueblo is where southern Colorado's senior population lives and where the regional hospitals sit. Milestone birthdays for older recipients sit underneath all of it.
The hardest part of an order like this is not the arrangement. It is the timing, and Pueblo timing is unusual. The velorio happens the evening before the funeral Mass. Flowers for the wake need to be at the funeral home by late afternoon of that first day, not the morning of the service. If you are calling from Denver or the Springs or further out, that detail moves the order up by twenty-four hours.
For Mexican-American Catholic funerals in Pueblo, white is the dominant register. White lilies, white roses, white carnations, white lisianthus. Cross-shaped and heart-shaped standing sprays move steadily here. Casket sprays for immediate family. Standing sprays for everyone else, and the flower count at a Pueblo wake can be high because the community is close-knit and the extended family arrives in numbers. Romero Family Funeral Home on Cleveland is the surname-led choice for many Hispanic families. Davis Mortuary on Broadway, Roselawn off Roselawn Road, and Angelus Chapel on Evans Avenue all run velorio services regularly. The casket spray sits on the lid. Standing sprays bracket the room.
Flowers for the church the next morning are a separate decision. The Mass at Holy Family, St. Pius X, or St. Therese carries its own altar arrangements that the parish often handles. If you want to send to the family, the right placement is the family home in the week after the funeral, where a Sympathy at Home arrangement carries through the period when the casseroles have stopped arriving and the silence sets in. For larger services or family memorials, funeral wreaths and sprays are the format that reads at scale across a chapel or cemetery setting.
One pivot worth knowing for Pueblo specifically. November first and second is Día de los Muertos, and for Mexican-American families that period is not sympathy in the white-flowers sense. Marigolds are the flower. Orange and yellow are the colors. The order goes to the family home or directly to the cemetery. If a Pueblo family lost someone three years ago and you want to mark the day, ask for marigold-forward in warm tones. The register is celebration, not mourning.
This is the order the Pueblo page handles more than any other. Adult children who left for work in Denver or the Springs decades ago, parents who stayed, and a senior population that is twenty percent of the city on the higher counts. Villa Pueblo on Bonforte Boulevard, Sharmar Village on West Abriendo, University Park Care Center off Desert Flower, Bonaventure on the Eagleridge side, Brookdale El Camino on Surfwood. The list is long because the city is one of southern Colorado's senior hubs.
The format of the arrangement matters more than the flowers themselves on a care home order. A box arrangement or a vase arrangement works. A hand-tied bouquet does not, because the facility almost never has a spare vase, and reception has neither the time nor the brief to find one. Memory care units add another layer. Familiar stems only, which means roses, carnations, daisies. Non-toxic species, which rules out lily of the valley and foxglove. Stable non-glass containers. Low fragrance for shared rooms. The card needs the resident's full name, the room number if you have it, and your phone number in case the room has changed since your last visit. When the confirmation comes back as "left at reception," the arrangement is on its way to the resident. Staff delivery to the room usually happens within the hour.
For senders who want to keep the gesture going through the year, the Miss You and retirement flowers categories carry the right register for an older recipient who is not having a birthday or a medical event but who is across a state line from you.
Order before 1PM today and the arrangement is at the door this afternoon. Saturday cutoff is 10AM. Same-day Sunday only on Mother's Day.
Browse Thinking-of-YouPueblo runs two major hospitals close to a mile and a half apart on different sides of the city. Parkview Medical at 400 West 16th is the Level II trauma center for the region and carries the higher emergency admission volume. St. Mary-Corwin at 1008 Minnequa has been in service for over 140 years and houses the Dorcy Cancer Center, the breast care center, and the orthopedic floors. The two hospitals do not share protocols. The order needs to know which one and which floor before it goes to the bench.
Parkview is HIPAA-directory and requires the patient's full legal name as registered. ICU does not accept flowers. The behavioral health unit varies by ward and is worth a call to confirm. St. Mary-Corwin is the one that catches callers off guard. The Dorcy Cancer Center sits inside the same building. Oncology floors do not accept flowers anywhere in the country and Dorcy is no exception. Aspergillus is the underlying reason. The fungal spore risk is real for immunocompromised patients and the policy is non-negotiable. General medical and orthopedic floors at St. Mary-Corwin do accept flowers. The question to ask before placing the order is which floor, and if it is oncology, the home address is the right destination instead.
For format, vase or box arrangements both work. Hand-tied bouquets do not, because nursing staff cannot stop to find a vessel. Lilies are out across most wards because of pollen and fragrance. Daisies clear almost every floor in the country. The get-well category is built around stems that travel a hospital corridor without complaint, and the hospital flowers page has the format guidance specifically. The Colorado Mental Health Hospital on West 24th is its own category, with restrictions that vary by unit and are best confirmed directly with the unit before ordering.
If you do not know the recipient's situation precisely, plant compositions are the safest pick in Pueblo. The Dish Garden is what callers land on when they want longevity over visual peak. Peace lily, parlor palm, dracaena, syngonium, and trailing ivy in a low ceramic bowl. The composition reads correctly for sympathy, for a get-well at a non-oncology hospital floor, for an aunt in Bonaventure who is recovering from a procedure, and for a desk at a workplace. The plants outlast cut work by months. In a Pueblo summer that durability matters, and in a care home it matters more, because nobody on staff is changing vase water on a daily schedule.
Our NC office, Monday-Friday.
1PM weekdays, 10AM Saturdays. Sunday delivery for Mother's Day only.
Velorio services often run the evening before the funeral Mass, so sympathy flowers usually need to arrive a full day earlier than out-of-town senders expect.
$16.95 flat fee to any Pueblo address.
No surge pricing or mileage add-ons, even for care homes and hospitals on the edges of the city.
For Parkview, the patient's full legal name as registered is required at reception, and ICU does not accept flowers. St. Mary-Corwin's Dorcy Cancer Center and oncology floors do not accept flowers anywhere in the building because of immunocompromised patients and fungal-spore risk. General medical and orthopedic floors at both hospitals do accept flowers, and care homes like Villa Pueblo, Sharmar Village, and University Park Care Center need the resident's full name plus room number on the order so staff can move the arrangement straight to the right door.
Order before 1PM today and the flowers are at the address this afternoon.
From the bench
I worked the bench in the North Carolina Piedmont for thirty years before I came to the phones in 2018. Burlington in the late 1980s, then the Research Triangle through the nineties, then a shop in Greensboro for the run of years that followed. The summer heat in those years gave me my first real lesson in stem selection. North Carolina hits ninety degrees in July with humidity in the seventies. Pueblo hits ninety-five with humidity in the twenties. The first one rots petals. The second one desiccates them. They are different deaths and they need different stems.
The carnations and chrysanthemums I steer Pueblo callers toward this summer are the same flowers I built into Burlington summer arrangements as a young florist. I watched roses from the same wholesale tier crisp at the edges by day five and watched carnations from the same delivery sit on a kitchen counter still saturated red on day twelve. Chrysanthemums shipped through Miami from Colombian farms gave me fourteen days of vase life in a moderate room and ten days in a hot one. A rose at the same price gave seven days and four. The split between an arrangement looking tired on day five and one looking bright on day eleven is which stems the florist reached for at market that morning.
What changed at the bench was I stopped recommending the prettiest flower and started recommending the one that survived the first three days. A bride does not care. A wedding gets a single afternoon and roses peak there fine. A care home resident does. A grieving family at a velorio wake does. The arrangement that holds through the service, sits on the family's kitchen table the week after, and still looks like flowers on day eight is the one I want sent. The cushion mums and the ginger jar carnations carry that work. They earned it on the bench in the late nineties and they earn it now on a Pueblo doorstep in August.
Joan, NCCPF Certified Florist · 30 years on the bench in the NC Piedmont, now on the Lily's Florist USA phones.
The window between confirmation of the order and confirmation of delivery runs three to five hours on a weekday placed before 1PM. Saturdays are tighter because the partner florist's route closes earlier behind the 10AM cutoff. The order moves from the website or the phone line into the partner florist's queue, gets built that morning, loaded onto the run, and dispatched. The confirmation lands when the door has been answered or the front desk has signed for it.
For care home and hospital deliveries the confirmation often reads as "left at reception" rather than handed to the recipient directly. That is normal and not a sign anything is wrong. Reception or the volunteer service moves the arrangement to the room within the hour. For sympathy orders to a funeral home, the confirmation comes from the director's office once the flowers are placed. The card message gets attached at the bench and travels with the arrangement, which is why the message slot on the order form matters more than people think.
If you have not heard back by the end of the day, especially on a care home or hospital order, the front desk is the right call before us. They have the room records and the delivery log right there. Most of the time the arrangement is already with the recipient and the confirmation is just slow to land. If something has gone wrong, we want to hear, and the team in NC will get on it the same hour.
The phones in North Carolina run on Eastern time and hand off to the online order system overnight. If you are ordering late from a different time zone for a Pueblo address, set the delivery date for the next day and use the order notes for any context we should know about. That keeps the order clean for the florist and gives us room to fix anything that looks off before it leaves the bench.
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