20 Pink Rose With Teddy And Chocolates
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Description
Twenty pink roses in a hand-tied bunch with a teddy bear and a box of chocolates. This is the largest and most expensive gift combo in the collection. Everything we sell with a bear or chocolates or both is a variation on the same idea: cover more ground with one delivery. This product covers the most ground of all. Our thirty-first most popular across Bali and number one to BIMC Hospital.
$83.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Kuta, Ubud, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Twenty pink roses arrive as a hand-tied bunch with a teddy bear and assorted chocolates.
What Arrives
Twenty pink roses in warm medium pink, hand-tied into a dense bunch with green foliage visible behind and between the blooms. The roses are partially open. At twenty stems, the bunch has real weight to it. This is a two-arm delivery. The roses are laid on their side for transport and stand upright once placed into a vase by the recipient. Beside the bunch sits the tan teddy bear with a plaid bow, and in front an open-topped box of assorted milk and dark chocolates. Three separate items delivered together.
Number One to BIMC Hospital
BIMC Hospital in Kuta is the international-standard hospital that most expats and tourists end up at when something goes wrong in Bali. Surgeries, accidents, extended stays. The patients are often far from home, often alone, and often there longer than they planned to be. The people sending flowers to BIMC are not sending casual birthday gifts. They are sending comfort to someone who is stuck in a hospital bed and needs to know somebody cares enough to organise a delivery from the other side of the world.
That emotional weight explains why this product, the most expensive combo in the range, outsells every other option to BIMC. The sender is not shopping for value. They are shopping for impact. Twenty roses fills a hospital bedside table with colour. Chocolates give the patient something to eat that is not hospital food. And the bear sits on the bed or the windowsill for the duration of the stay, which at BIMC can run from three days to three weeks depending on the situation. The bear is still there when the flowers have finished and the chocolates are gone.
"Hospital deliveries are the ones where I take the most care with colour. A customer from Perth called me once and asked for red roses to BIMC for his wife after surgery. I suggested pink instead. He asked why. I told him red roses in a hospital room look like a romantic gesture, and his wife was lying in bed with tubes in her arm and stitches across her stomach. She did not want romance. She wanted to feel like things were going to be normal again. Pink does that. Pink is warm without being intense. It does not demand anything from the person looking at it. I have sent pink roses to BIMC probably two hundred times and nobody has ever told me the colour was wrong. Red gets questioned. White in a hospital room makes people think of funerals. Pink just sits there and makes the room feel less clinical. That customer called me back a week later and said his wife cried when the flowers arrived. She told him they were the first thing in five days that made the room feel like it was not a hospital."
How Hospital Deliveries Work
Delivering to a hospital is different from delivering to a villa or a hotel. Kadek cannot walk directly to the patient's room. At BIMC, flowers go through the reception desk. The staff check the patient name against their records, confirm the room number, and either take the delivery themselves or allow Kadek to bring it to the ward. That process adds twenty to thirty minutes to a delivery that would take five minutes at a private address.
I learned early to call BIMC before Kadek leaves the shop. The first hospital delivery we attempted in 2014, Kadek arrived and was told the patient had been moved to a different ward that morning. Nobody had told us. He waited forty-five minutes at reception while they located the right room. After that I started calling the hospital directly to confirm the patient is still admitted, confirm the ward, and ask whether there are any restrictions on deliveries. Some ICU wards do not allow flowers. Some post-surgery patients are in shared rooms where a twenty-rose bunch takes up more space than the bedside table offers. Knowing that before Kadek leaves saves time and avoids the situation where he arrives and gets turned away with a bunch of roses in his hands and nowhere to put them.
The same protocol applies to Siloam Hospital in Denpasar, though the process there is slightly faster because the building layout is newer and the reception desk is closer to the wards.
The thing about hospital flowers that most people do not think about is timing. A sender in Australia orders at 9am their time, which is 6am in Bali. The shop opens at nine. Kadek can have the arrangement assembled and be at BIMC by eleven. But the patient might be in surgery until two. Or they might be sleeping after medication. Or the doctor is doing rounds and no visitors or deliveries are allowed on the ward until three. Ayu now asks every BIMC sender what time would be best for the patient. Not best for the sender. Best for the patient. Afternoon deliveries between two and four land better than morning ones because by afternoon the patient has had their morning medications, eaten lunch, and is awake and alert enough to notice twenty pink roses arriving at the foot of their bed. That timing advice comes from over a decade of hospital runs and from listening to the BIMC nurses who told Ayu directly that morning deliveries often sit at reception for hours because the patient is unavailable.
Three Items, Three Recovery Timelines
The roses last four to six days. The chocolates last one or two days. The bear lasts for as long as the patient keeps it, which based on reorder patterns appears to be a long time. Nobody has ever messaged asking for a replacement bear. They have messaged asking for more roses.
In a hospital context, that timeline means the patient gets chocolates on the first evening, something that feels like a treat rather than a medical meal. The roses fill the room with colour for the rest of the week. And the bear sits on the bed through the remaining days, through the check-ups, through the discharge paperwork, through the taxi back to the villa or the hotel. The bear is the item that travels home with the patient. It is the part of the gift that outlasts the stay.
Compared to the Other 20-Pink Products
The 20 Pink Roses + Chocolates at $63 gives you the same twenty roses and the same chocolates without the bear. The 20 Pink Roses + Teddy at $68 gives you the roses and the bear without the chocolates. This product adds both for $83. The $15 gap between the chocolates-only version and this full package is the cost of adding a bear, and the $15 gap from the teddy version is the cost of adding chocolates. Both additions are small relative to the base price, which is why hospital senders tend to pick the full combo rather than choosing between the two.
When someone is ordering flowers for a person in hospital, the instinct is to send everything. Not to optimise for price. This is not a Tuesday afternoon "just because" order. This is a "my wife is in a Bali hospital after a scooter accident and I am in Melbourne and I cannot get there until Friday" order. At that moment, the extra $15 or $20 for the bear and the chocolates is not a consideration.
Who Sends This
Partners and family members sending to patients at BIMC Hospital and Siloam Hospital. International senders ordering from Australia, Singapore, and Europe for someone who is unwell or recovering in Bali. Birthday senders who want the most generous combo in the range. Anniversary orders where the sender wants roses plus extras at a scale that fills a room. Anyone sending to Legian, Sanur, Jimbaran, or Pererenan who wants the biggest gift combo available.
For roses without the extras, see the rose collection. For other bear and chocolate combos at lower price points, browse the gifts range. For arrangements in foam or boxes, see the full arrangement collection.
Care
Place the twenty roses in a large vase with fresh water. A narrow vase will not work at this volume. The bunch needs a wide mouth container where the stems can spread and the blooms can fan out into a dome. Trim half a centimetre from each stem at a diagonal before placing in water. Strip all foliage below the waterline. Change the water every two days and re-trim stems on day three. In a cool hospital room with air conditioning, the roses may last an extra day or two beyond what they would in a warm villa. Chocolates should be eaten within a day of arrival. The bear requires no maintenance.
Delivery
Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. Seven days a week including Sundays and holidays. Delivery to Umalas, Berawa, Kerobokan, Tabanan, Gianyar and everywhere in between. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.