9/9

Flower Delivery to Springdale Heights NSW: Same Day to Ettamogah Rise by 2pm

They bought up the hill for the view and the second living room, and they bought it new enough that some of the streets still smell like wet concrete when it rains. You did not. You ring on a Sunday from Sydney or Melbourne or wherever the work landed you, the kids stay over in school holidays, and the milestone you are sending flowers for is happening in a house you have stood inside maybe four times. I am Siobhan. Andrew and I started Lily's Florist in 2009. The orders that come into Springdale Heights are mostly placed from further away than the recipient knows, by senders who have stopped pretending the next trip up is happening any time soon.

There are streets up here that did not exist in 2010. The Ettamogah Rise estate has been releasing lots since the rezoning in 2005, with planning approval for 413 lots in total, the gazette adds a name to a corner most years, and the apps lag the kerbs by a season or two. For many years our partner florist near North Albury was driving those new corners the same month they were paved, which is why a recently gazetted Springdale Heights address with no pin on the maps still gets the same-day bunch to the right door.

Order Online by 2pm

Flowers from $42.95, $16.95 delivery

Or Phone 1300 360 469

7am-6pm weekdays, 10am Sat

Same Day Delivery
(349)
$74.50
Same Day Delivery
(347)
$79.95
Same Day Delivery
(417)
$97.95
Same Day Delivery
(575)
$74.50
Same Day Delivery
(443)
$129.95
Same Day Delivery
(311)
$74.50
Same Day Delivery
(302)
$126.20
Same Day Delivery
(294)
$80.95
Same Day Delivery
(266)
$89.95
Same Day Delivery
(243)
$86.95
Same Day Delivery
(220)
$79.95
Same Day Delivery
(257)
$80.95
Same Day Delivery
(136)
$80.95
Same Day Delivery
(117)
$124.95
Same Day Delivery
(99)
$84.95
Same Day Delivery
(120)
$80.95
Same Day Delivery
(70)
$42.95
Same Day Delivery
(44)
$80.75

Why a Springdale Heights Address Sometimes Lags the Apps, and What That Means for the Bunch Getting Through

Anna, qualified florist | 15+ years on the bench, the call volume from a Pottsville home office that processed orders from Cape York to Hobart and every map-app blind spot in between

The apps know the suburb but not always the street, and a recently gazetted address on a new corner of Ettamogah Rise can show up as the wrong driveway or no driveway at all. I heard the call enough times to have a ready answer for it: the florist who has been on the network long enough to drive the suburb knows where the kerb starts before the algorithm does. There is a reason same-day flowers can still reach a five-month-old address in Springdale Heights when a bigger national network drops the order. It is the difference between an address book and a database.

The one that taught me the rule was a Perth daughter sending birthday flowers to her dad's new house in the estate a few summers back. The first driver could not find the cul-de-sac, the GPS pin sat in the middle of a paddock that had been topsoiled but not built on. I rang the partner on the network end, he put the bunch in his own van the next morning, and the dad opened the door on day two with a card from the daughter that said "sorry, the algorithm got confused, but I still love you." The dad rang her back laughing. After that I asked, on any Springdale Heights address newer than 2018, who was actually driving the route.

A new estate address looks like every other suburban delivery on the booking form. It is not. What actually solves it is two things working together: a partner florist who has driven those streets, and a delivery note with a landmark on it. "Two doors past the lemon tree, blue mailbox" is worth more than a GPS pin for a street that was bitumen six months ago. We tell callers that on the phones now, and the misroutes on new corners stopped.

How an Order to Springdale Heights Actually Lands on the Doorstep

There is no warehouse on Wagga Road sending these out. The bunch comes from a partner florist's cool room in Albury, made the morning of delivery, driven by someone who knows whether the cul-de-sac at the back of Ettamogah Rise has a kerb yet. That is the difference.

The chalkboard we drew the first time we tried to explain to a new partner florist what the network actually was.

What happens to your order when it hits the Lily's Florist network
1
Order online or by phone before 2pm weekdays, 10am Saturdays
2
Sent to the partner florist as a paid order, with an address-book check on any new-estate street
3
Built fresh from the morning's cool-room stock, same day
4
Driver takes the route, paper backup for new corners the apps lag on
5
Hand-delivered to the door, or the safe spot in your delivery note

What People Send to Springdale Heights, and How to Get It Right

What people send into the postcode breaks into three patterns over a year, with the long tail of unlabelled reasons covered by a general celebration recommendation when none of those patterns quite fits. The advice below is what we learned from the phone lines, not the website copy.

Cannot Be at the 50th in Springdale Heights This Saturday

The 50th is happening on the back deck of a house your sister-in-law bought four years ago, or in the Glasshouse function room at the Tavern on Kaitlers Road if the guest list got longer than the carport could hold. You committed in February before the work travel landed on your calendar. You will not be there. You are sending flowers and a card that says you will make the next one, and you mean it this time.

Springdale Heights is mostly freestanding homes on big blocks, three-quarters detached, front yards that run straight to the kerb. The side passage along the carport is where most of the safe drops happen on a hot Saturday afternoon. A delivery note matters. "Leave under the back carport, second house past the cul-de-sac sign, blue mailbox" beats a GPS drop every time on a January afternoon at thirty-two degrees.

For a fiftieth at a Springdale Heights home, what I steered callers toward was a bunch that holds the back-deck dinner without overwhelming the dining table afterwards. Roses and lisianthus in a colour the recipient actually wears, not what the algorithm assumes. Light-blue lisianthus next to a coral rose holds about two weeks in a dry inland sitting room through the cooler months, and roughly half that through a January heatwave. The photo back to the sender, when it eventually comes, is what most fifty-something birthday callers were really hoping for. Browse the 50th birthday flowers range and pick a colour first, the stem mix second.

A card that lands well at a fiftieth, from the calls that did: "thinking of you on the big one, send photos." Short enough to fit. Specific enough to mean something.

Send New Baby Flowers to Albury Base Reception, Not the Maternity Ward Direct

A baby has arrived at Albury Base and the parents are exhausted before lunchtime. You cannot drive up today. The maternity ward at 201 Borella Road is about twelve kilometres from the Springdale Heights doorstep where the family will eventually take the baby home, and it sits in the same hospital precinct as the cancer centre and the emergency department.

In our experience, the flowers go to the main reception at Borella Road first, and the ward clerk on the day matches them to the mother's name on the maternity floor and walks them up. Most ward deliveries land within thirty minutes to a few hours, depending on staffing. Addressing on the card matters: the mother's name, the ward, the room number if you have it. "Baby Smith" sits at reception until someone asks. Browse new baby flowers for the standard arrangement shape, or hospital flowers if the routing is the part you are uncertain about.

Anna on what works for an Albury Base maternity ward bedside

Scented Oriental lilies are off the table for a maternity ward. The pollen stains the bedsheet, and the scent carries in a room where a newborn is settling. I told a lot of callers asking for lilies to swap to the pollen-free Asiatic instead, or to lisianthus, which gives you the rose-adjacent look without the staining risk and which holds in a hospital room's air conditioning for ten to fourteen days. Box arrangements over hand-tied bunches for a maternity bedside, because nobody on day two is hunting around for a vase. A card that lands at a maternity bedside: "welcome to the world, love from all of us." The mother reads it three times and shows the message to whoever walks in next.

Sending Sympathy to a Family on the Hill

Someone in Springdale Heights has lost someone. You heard yesterday or the day before. The message came through a family chat, or a phone call that started in the second half of a sentence, and the people most affected are the ones standing in the kitchen the rest of this week.

Two questions decide where the flowers go. Service flowers go to Lester & Son on Wantigong Street in North Albury or to Glenmorus Memorial Gardens on Glenmorus Street in Glenroy, where the staff log the arrangement against the service date. Home flowers go to the house up the hill, ideally a few days into the week after, when the casseroles have stopped arriving and the quiet has started. Sympathy flowers for the service, sympathy to the home for the week after. They are not the same brief.

From Anna: Springdale Heights has a stronger Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population than the New South Wales average, and the Black Range bushland on the suburb's edge runs into walking tracks the family may use. A native bunch, banksia and kangaroo paw and wattle with leucadendron, can be the right call for a family who wants something that does not match the standard white-lily template. I asked first when the caller did not specify the family's customs. White roses are the safe default if you do not know. A native bunch is the one people remembered as a thoughtful read of the family rather than a generic gesture.

A sympathy card that does its job: "thinking of you and your family this week." A card that does not: "everything happens for a reason."

Order before 2pm on a weekday, or by 10am on Saturday, and the bunch is at the Springdale Heights door this afternoon.

Browse Birthday Flowers for Mum

What to Send When the Reason Doesn't Fit a Card on the Calendar

You do not need a birthday or an anniversary or bad news to send flowers up the hill. About a third of the orders we send to a Springdale Heights address come with a card that says nothing more than "I was thinking about you on Tuesday." The recipient is having a flat week, or the recipient is the parent who chose the new house and is still finding their feet in it, or you do not have a label for the reason and you do not need one.

What I recommended on the phones for an unspecified Springdale Heights delivery was a native Australian bunch built from what the Albury partner had in the cool room that morning. Banksia and leucadendron carry past two weeks in a dry inland sitting room. The waxflower fills out and dries upright if the recipient lets it. If a native bunch is not what the sender pictures, our florist's choice for the day brings whatever the morning's best stems happen to be. The recipient never sees the price tag. What they see is that someone thought of them on a Tuesday.

How to Order Flowers for Delivery to Springdale Heights

Phone

1300 360 469
7am to 6pm weekdays
10am Saturdays
Or order online any time.

Same Day Cutoff

2pm weekdays, 10am on Saturdays for same-day Springdale Heights delivery. No Sunday delivery. On forecast 35-plus days through January and February, we route morning slots first.

Delivery $16.95

Flat rate across the 2641 postcode, including Springdale Heights, Hamilton Valley, and the Lavington streets that border. No surcharge for newer estate addresses or for the cul-de-sacs at the back of Ettamogah Rise.

The Springdale Heights Summer Doorstep, and Why We Deliver Before Noon on Hot Days

Springdale Heights is built on the lower slopes of the Black Range, which can run a degree or two cooler than the river-flat suburbs of Albury below. The suburb still records the same summer extremes as Albury Airport: forty-six point one degrees on the fourth of January in 2020, and an average of sixty-five days a year over thirty degrees. Houses face every direction in Ettamogah Rise. A north-facing front step takes radiant heat from the brick veneer for twenty or thirty minutes at one in the afternoon in January before the doorstep itself starts costing a rose the cellular hold it needs to last the week.

We route Springdale Heights orders for delivery before noon on forecast hot days, and the booking form holds an extra prompt for a landmark on any address that was gazetted in the last few years. If a delivery note is missing a safe-drop and the forecast is over thirty-five, we ring back before the bunch leaves the cool room. Order before 2pm today and the bunch is at the Springdale Heights door this afternoon.

Feefo Trusted Service Award 2026
23,362+
verified customer reviews on Feefo
2024 2025 2026

After You Order

Once you click order, the confirmation lands in your inbox with the bunch you chose, the address you typed, and the delivery date. We check Springdale Heights addresses against the partner's address book before the order is built, and if the street looks like one of the freshly gazetted corners in Ettamogah Rise we ring you back before anything leaves the cool room. The booking-form delivery note is the bit that gets a heat-day arrangement under cover and the bit that helps a driver find a recently paved cul-de-sac.

A note from Andrew on the booking form for a hill address

I run the operational end from Pottsville. If a Springdale Heights address is in Ettamogah Rise and the street name has been on the maps less than a year, the form prompts for a landmark in the delivery note. "Two doors past the lemon tree" is worth more than a GPS pin for a street that was bitumen six months ago. We added that prompt after a stretch of new-estate misroutes in this part of the postcode a couple of summers back. The follow-up call rate on those corners went down sharply by the next January, and we have kept the prompt in the form since.

If the photo back from your mum's place in Springdale Heights does not come for a week, or at all, that is more common than the thank-you call. The arrival landed. The confirmation comes when it comes, sometimes through your sister, sometimes through a neighbour, sometimes never. That silence is normal, not something gone wrong.

If something does look off, ring 1300 360 469 between seven and six on weekdays, or from ten on Saturdays. The email line is [email protected]. We answer both, usually within the business day.

ABN: 17 830 858 659

About the Author

Andrew and Siobhan Thomson, co-founders of Lily's Florist
Siobhan Thomson
Co-founder, Lily's Florist

Andrew and I founded Lily's Florist in 2009 from the Tweed coast, three years after we bought a small shop in Kingscliff that taught us most of what we did not know about cut flowers. We grew up between Taree and Sydney, and we live in the Tweed now with our two daughters, Asha and Ivy. Andrew has handled the phones from Pottsville since I stepped off them in February 2011 when Ivy was on the way. The partner near North Albury who covers the Springdale Heights run has been on the network with us for a long time, since the Ettamogah Rise estate was still posting up its first streets.

There is no warehouse on Wagga Road sending these out. The network sits behind 800-plus partner florists across the country, and the bunch that lands at the front door in Springdale Heights was made in a cool room by a person who has driven the suburb's streets for long enough to know them by sight. If you want a fuller version of how we built that, the about page has it.

Our Kingscliff shop

The original Kingscliff shop, bought 2006. The brand and the partner network came three years later in 2009.