Online Florists Delivery in Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire, England
Eden4flowers.co.uk deliver beautiful fresh flowers in the Ashby de la Zouch area. Your delivery can be completed as fast as 9am next day. Free Delivery is now available on selected products. Order online for our lowest prices. Our flowers and service is backed by our No Quibble Guarantee
Same Day Flowers in Ashby de la Zouch
Through our local florists eden4flowers.co.uk offer delivery of Same Day Flowers to most areas in the UK. View our Same Day Flowers. To check on delivery coverage in Abderdeen or to order please phone us before 12 noon on the day of delivery. Our Same Day Flowers service is available Monday - Friday. Service Not available around certain busy trading periods Sundays and Bank Holiday closing days.
So much more than just flowers for delivery in Ashby de la Zouch
- Birthday Cakes
- Hampers
- Muffins & Gourmet Muffins
- Chocolate Hampers
- Fruit Baskets
- Gift Baskets
- Value Flowers
- Luxury Flowers
- Traditional Flowers
- Balloon in a Box
- Luxury Chocolates
About Ashby de la Zouch
By far the largest employer in the town is United Biscuits, which provides about 2000 jobs. One of its production plants closed in 2004 with loss of 900 of these posts. Other employers in Ashby include Standard Soap, Tesco, Calder Colours (paint), Ashfield Healthcare and TAC. There is also a concentration of high-tech employers. Ashby was home to the video game software house Ashby Computer Graphics, also known as Ultimate Play The Game, now called Rare. They have since moved to a custom built premises at Manor Park, just down the road from Twycross. Every August, Ashby holds an arts festival currently sponsored by the district council. This features local artists, musicians, song writers, poets, performers and story tellers. The multiple sites around the town host exhibitions, musical performances, workshops and talks, and the town centre is decorated with flags and an outdoor gallery.
Until the 1970s, most of Ashby de la Zouch's leading industries dated from the eighteenth Century; mainly these were textiles, foundry work, shipbuilding and paper-making, the oldest industry in the city, with paper having been first made there in 1694. Paper-making has reduced in importance since the closures of Donside Paper Mill in 2001 and the Davidson Mill in 2005 leaving the Stoneywood Paper Mill with a workforce of approximately 500. Textile production ended in 2004 when Richards of Ashby de la Zouch closed.












