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Petal picks for the season
Halloween jack-o'-lanterns have been darkened. Scary decor has come down.
With Thanksgiving and Christmas right around the corner, home interiors and exteriors will soon welcome hints of the season with decor that includes holiday flowers and plants adorning tabletops, porches and windowsills. In the coming days, stores, nurseries and flower shops will begin stocking those flowers and plants that are most popular during the holiday season. Poinsettias, Christmas cacti, amaryllis, paperwhites, carnations, cushion mums and red roses take top billing this time of year, favored for their vibrant color and how well they blend with holiday greenery.
Mandy Lowrimore, floral designer with Lazelle's Flower Shop, said a mixed arrangement with Christmas greenery, featuring carnations and cushion mums, are most popular during the holidays. They are ideal for birthdays, get-togethers and as hostess gifts.
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Flaunt that flora, faker
How to pull it off:
Keeping fresh flowers indoors will be a psychological imperative for The Faker over the next fade-to-gray six months. But who has time or money for weekly treks to the florist?
Enter the grocery store. Save for those carnations in chemically induced colors, you really can turn cut-rate blooms into the jewel of your - or your host's - table.
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Centerpiece strategies
Using a centerpiece to make a table look at least as exciting and special as the meal being served can enhance a meal's enjoyment, stimulate conversation and establish the tone of the event.
Toni Burnette of North Myrtle Beach Florist says, "A dining room table is not complete without a centerpiece." Experienced helpers abound on the Grand Strand to ensure that a sparkling, innovative centerpiece will grace your table for the upcoming holidays.
General considerations
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Mysterious, sophisticated black plants
Welcome to the dark side.
This is where the other plants grow, the ones that defy the cheery kaleidoscope of nature. They're black plants, some with names that underscore their eerie appearance - names like Dracula orchid and bat flower, voodoo lily and mourning widow.
They're odd and striking and, as Paul Bonine puts it, "They're really weird."
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Prestwick Country Club No. 9
Dream 18 - Hole 15
Prestwick Country Club No. 9
537 yards | Par 5 | 9 votes
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T his hole turns left around a large lake from tee to green. The 537-yard par-5s length, a putting surface that nestles against the bulkheaded lake on the left, and a pot bunker in front of the green make it a three-shot hole for most.
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