Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Surinam cherry salsa: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
- 🔴Dice Surinam cherries (Eugenia uniflora) with red onion, cilantro, and lime 🍒🔴
Sweet, tart, and perfect for grilled fish 🐟
Surinam Cherry Salsa:
Ingredients
- 1 cup diced Surinam cherries (Eugenia uniflora)
- 1/4 cup chopped red onion
- 2 tbsp chopped cilantro
- Juice of 1 lime
- Salt to taste
Instructions
- Remove seeds and dice Surinam cherries.
- Mix with onion, cilantro, and lime juice.
- Add salt to taste and stir gently.
- Serve chilled with grilled fish or chips.
🛒Plant Surinam Cherry: Red and Black (Lolita)
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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Is it a tree dog or a flying alien?
Pelmen a hairless Sphynx cat
Pelmen - a hairless Sphynx cat, with his famous "alien" look - is playing fetch.
Did you know that some cats actually play fetch too? Though usually on their own terms!
🐈📸 Cat Pelmen is a friend of TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.
#PeopleCats
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Surprising Miniature Gardenia
Gardenia radicans - Dwarf Miniature Creeping Gardenia
Gardenia radicans - Dwarf Miniature Creeping Gardenia
Gardenia radicans - Dwarf Miniature Creeping Gardenia
- Gardenia radicans - Dwarf Miniature Creeping Gardenia - can surprise even longtime gardenia fans. It has all the charm of the classic shrub - glossy green leaves, pure white flowers, and that unforgettable fragrance - but in a smaller, easier form.
- Natural bonsai. This little plant grows low and wide, staying under 1-2 feet tall and spreading up to 3-4 feet. It forms a dense mound or creeping groundcover that looks great along walkways or spilling from a pot. The leaves are tiny and shiny, giving it a neat, polished look all year.
- The flowers are about an inch across, double or semi-double, and smell just like the full-size gardenia. They bloom in spring and often return through summer, filling the air with perfume.
- Easier than other gardenias. Gardenia radicans isn’t as fussy as most gardenias. It can handle clay, sandy, or loamy soil as long as it drains well. Once established, it’s fairly drought-tolerant and can even handle some cold, down to around 15F in protected spots.
- Where to plant. It's perfect for small gardens, patios, or as a bonsai. You get the luxury fragrance of a gardenia without needing a big space. Use it as a groundcover, edging plant, or container specimen. It's one of those plants that stays tidy, looks refined, and keeps blooming. For anyone who loves gardenias but wants something compact and low-maintenance, Gardenia radicans is a great find.
🛒 Add unique Mini-Gardenia to your collection
#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden
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King of Fruits that makes you healthy and happy
🍍 Everybody loves the Pineapple, but not everyone knows that this exotic fruit actually grows on a plant, Ananas comosus, a member of the Bromeliad family. Growing pineapple is easier than you may think, and sure to grab attention.
Pineapple can make you healthier.... and happy! Watch the video:
📱
🛒 Explore Pineapple varieties
#Food_Forest
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The eyes shout
"The eyes shout what the lips fear to say." - William Henry
🐈📸 Cat Georgie has impressive sea-green eyes. TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.
#PeopleCats #Quotes
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How we turned an eyesore into a wall of flowers
Quisqualis vine - Rangoon Creeper
- Quisqualis vine - Rangoon Creeper - Flamingo pink and fruity fragrance in one!
- Who said utility areas have to be ugly? Our Quisqualis indica - Rangoon Creeper - turned the roof of our water system into a wall of flowers! This shrubby vine covers itself in clusters of pink, crimson, and white blooms that change color as they age.
- The fragrance is sweet, fruity, and absolutely unforgettable. Every time we walk by, we can’t help but stop and smell the... creeper!
- Got a fence, trellis, or an eyesore to hide? This is your plant!
🛒 Plant Quisqualis today for a beautiful spot with perfume tomorrow
📚 Learn more:
- 💋Flamingo pink with fruity fragrance
- 💋Single flower variety
- 💋How to cover an ugly spot with a fragrance and and beauty, stop and smell the roses
- 💋You never have enough of this flower fruity fragrance
#Butterfly_Plants #Perfume_Plants #Hedges_with_benefits
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Blue butterfly pea lemonade: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
- 🔵Blue butterfly pea flowers (Clitoria ternatea) make an excellent lemonade!
- 🔵Brew the flowers into a blue tea, add a bit of lemon juice.
- 🔵Watch the color turn purple like magic!
Blue butterfly pea lemonade
Ingredients
- 🔵 A handful of blue butterfly pea flowers (Clitoria ternatea)
- 🔵 Hot water for brewing
- 🔵 Fresh lemon juice
- 🔵 Ice cubes and lemon slices for serving
Instructions
- 🔵 Steep blue butterfly pea flowers in hot water to make deep blue tea.
- 🔵 Cool and add a splash of lemon juice — watch the color turn purple like magic!
- 🔵 Pour over ice and garnish with lemon slices.
🛒Plant Clitoria vine for blue and purple exotic drinks
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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A single soul dwelling in two bodies
"Friendship is a single soul dwelling in two bodies." - Aristotle
🐈📸 Manx tailless cats Matilda and Timo - the Twins PeopleCats.Garden - different? But similar eyes!
#Quotes #PeopleCats
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What spice comes from the small dried flower buds of a tropical tree?
Clove - Syzygium aromaticum
Clove - Syzygium aromaticum
Clove - Syzygium aromaticum
Allspice - Pimenta dioica, Jamaica pepper tree
Allspice - Pimenta dioica, Jamaica pepper tree
- 🌿 That would be Clove, from the tropical tree Syzygium aromaticum. The spice is actually the dried, unopened flower buds. They turn from pink to brown as they dry and release that powerful, warm aroma we associate with baking and holiday dishes. Cloves are native to the Moluccas, or Spice Islands of Indonesia, and are still grown widely across the tropics. The clove tree is ultra-tropical and very challenging to grow outside the true tropics, which is why it’s so rare in plant collections.
📸 Photos 1-3.
🌿 Another spice with a similar story is Allspice, from Pimenta dioica, also known as the Jamaica pepper tree. Unlike clove, it comes from dried unripe berries, not flower buds, but it earned its name because its flavor tastes like a mix of cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg all in one! The Allspice tree is much easier to grow, as it isn’t as fussy as the clove tree - though still frost-sensitive. It's compact and easy to keep in a container. This tree brings joy to your life and spice to your kitchen right away, so you don’t need to wait for years for the fruit of your labor!
📸 Photos 4-5.
🛒 Explore tropical spice trees and edibles
#Food_Forest #Fun_facts
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Date:
⭐ The Winter Stars: 8 Flowering Trees That Steal the Show
8 Best Flowering Trees That Bloom in Winter: Royal Poinciana with red-orange canopy, Dwarf Pink Tabebuia, Dwarf Golden Tabebuia, Pink Butterfly Orchid Tree, Golden Rain Tree, Weeping Red Bottlebrush, Hong Kong Orchid Tree, and Jacaranda with purple flowers.
Royal Poinciana (Delonix regia)
The diva of tropical trees. Huge red-orange flowers blanket the branches
from late winter through summer. If you’ve ever seen one in full
bloom, you know — it stops traffic.
Best in large yards or open spaces, but young ones do great in big pots for
a few years.
🛒 Shop
Tatiana: “If you want a tree that makes
people
say ‘wow,’ this is it.”
Tabebuia chrysotricha – Dwarf Golden Tabebuia
Small tree, big drama. It turns solid gold just before new leaves appear. Blooms while completely bare — a stunning contrast of yellow on brown wood. Perfect for patios, courtyards, and containers. Handles cool nights down to the mid-20s F. Bright, cheerful, and forgiving — the kind of tree that always looks like it’s celebrating. 🛒 Shop
Tabebuia impetiginosa – Dwarf Pink Tabebuia (Pau D’Arco)
The Florida “cherry blossom.” Pink-lavender flowers smother the branches each winter, often before any leaves return. Thrives in sandy soil, tolerates drought, and grows beautifully in large planters or pots indoors near a sunny window. Ideal for seasonal residents or anyone who wants color when everything else is asleep. 🛒 Shop
Jacaranda mimosifolia
If color had music, this would be jazz. Soft, fern-like leaves and cascades of violet-blue trumpet flowers — airy, elegant, unforgettable. Outdoors, it makes a graceful shade tree; in containers, it stays compact with regular pruning. Jacarandas reward patience — they bloom bigger each year. 🛒 Shop
Koelreuteria paniculata – Golden Rain Tree
A favorite for its surprises — golden blooms in summer, pink paper lantern pods in fall, and bronze leaves before rest. Fast-growing, tough, and easy. Loves full sun and moderate water. Great for open lawns or patio tubs. The kind of tree that gives you something new to look at every month. 🛒 Shop
Callistemon citrinus – Bottlebrush Tree
The hummingbird magnet.
Bright red, brush-shaped flowers bloom several times a year —
sometimes even in cool weather.
The dwarf form, ‘Little John,’ stays about 4 feet tall, perfect
for pots or small borders.
Trim lightly after flowering to keep it compact and colorful. 🛒
Shop
Tatiana: “If you’ve never grown a
tropical tree before — start here. It’s the friendliest
one.”
Bauhinia variegata – Pink Butterfly Tree
Graceful, fragrant, and forgiving. Its pink-lavender orchid-like flowers open from late winter through spring, filling the garden with color and pollinators. It’s fast-growing, drought-tolerant, and excellent for both ground and pots. Even the buds are edible — a fun bonus for adventurous gardeners. 🛒 Shop
Bauhinia blakeana – Hong Kong Orchid Tree
The queen of them all.
Huge magenta-purple blooms that last for months, from fall through spring.
Fragrant, clean (no messy seed pods), and perfect for patios or large
decorative containers.
Give it sun, a little water, and it will reward you with bloom after bloom.
🛒 Shop
Tatiana: “It’s the one tree that never lets winter
win.”
A note on grafted Hong Kong Orchid Trees: Most Hong Kong Orchid Trees are grafted, and that’s actually a big advantage. Because they don’t grow from seed, grafted plants mature faster and begin blooming while still small — sometimes within the first year. That makes them perfect for patio pots or small gardens where space is limited.
Bringing the Tropics Home
Whether your garden faces the Gulf or your window faces the snow, these trees let you live in color year-round. Plant them outdoors in warm zones or grow them in pots indoors — they adapt, they bloom, they brighten every corner.
Gardening isn’t about waiting for spring — it’s about finding joy in every season. And when a tree blooms in January, that joy feels twice as sweet.
🛒 Shop Winter Flowering Plants
✍️ Winter Bloomer Q&A
Q: Can these trees really bloom indoors?
Yes! Smaller species like Bottlebrush ‘Little John,’ Dwarf Tabebuias, and many Bauhinias bloom beautifully in pots with bright light or grow lamps.
Q: Do they lose their leaves in winter?
Some, like Tabebuias and Jacarandas, drop leaves right before blooming — it’s normal and part of their charm. Others, like Bottlebrush, stay evergreen.
Q: What fertilizer works best?
We use Sunshine Boosters — gentle, balanced, and perfect for tropicals. Feed every 2–3 weeks during active growth.
Q: How do I know when to water?
Touch the soil! If it’s dry an inch or two down, water deeply. Overwatering is the main mistake with tropicals.
Q: Can they handle frost?
A quick dip into the upper 20s F is fine for most mature trees. Cover young ones or move containers under shelter if colder.
Q: Which are best for beginners?
Start with Bottlebrush ‘Little John’ or Golden Tabebuia — compact, colorful, and nearly foolproof.
Q: When will they bloom?
Usually within few years if they get enough sun and warmth. Grafted plants blooms much sooner
Q: Which of these trees are best for pot growing?
For patios, balconies, or indoor sunrooms, choose the compact or grafted types:
- Tabebuia chrysotricha, Dwarf Golden Tabebuia, bright and easy.
- Tabebuia impetiginosa, Dwarf Pink Tabebuia, hardy and long-blooming.
- Callistemon ‘Little John’ – stays neat and flowers all year.
- Grafted Bauhinia blakeana – blooms while young, perfect for pots.




