Date: 15 Jan 2026
When the Black Bat Lily decides to bloom
Every so often a plant blooms and the whole greenhouse seems to slow down.
That is what happened this week with the Black Bat Lily, Tacca chantrieri. We have grown Taccas for years, but when the black ones open properly, it still feels special. The flowers are dark and quiet, almost unreal up close. They do not shout for attention. They make you lean in.
Right now, we have a lot of them blooming at the same time. If you have never seen one in person, photos only get you part of the way there. The wings are darker than you expect, and the whiskers seem to go on forever. People walk into the greenhouse, stop, stare, and usually ask the same question: "Is that real?" - Yes. It is.
A quick honest note, because this matters. The blooms themselves are delicate and may not travel well. That is just the nature of this plant. The plants, however, are strong, well established. With the right conditions, they bloom again. This is not a one-time trick.
Black Tacca is not a beginner houseplant, but it is also not impossible. It likes filtered light, steady warmth, and humidity. It does especially well in a greenhouse or a bright indoor spot where you already keep plants that enjoy moisture. It is the kind of plant you keep close, not one you forget in the corner.
We are offering them now simply because they are ready and looking their best. If you have been waiting for one, this is a good moment.
You can see the Black Bat Lily here: https://toptropicals.com/store/item/2345.htm
Just wanted to share something we are enjoying in the greenhouse right now. Some plants come and go. Some stay with you.
Tacca (Bat Lily) FAQ
What is Tacca?
Tacca, also known as Bat Lily or Devil Flower, is a tropical plant grown for its unusual bat-shaped flowers with long whisker-like filaments. The most popular species is Tacca chantrieri, the Black Bat Lily.
Is Tacca hard to grow?
Tacca is not a beginner plant, but it is not impossible. It does best with warmth, humidity, and filtered light. Gardeners who already grow orchids, calatheas, or other humidity-loving plants usually do well with Tacca.
Does Tacca need a greenhouse?
A greenhouse is ideal, but not required. Tacca can be grown indoors in a bright spot with indirect light and good humidity, such as near a humidifier or in a bright bathroom with a window or skylight.
Will my Tacca arrive in bloom?
Plants may be blooming in the greenhouse, but flowers are often removed before shipping because they are delicate and do not travel well. The plants are well established and capable of blooming again with proper care.
How often does Tacca bloom?
Tacca does not bloom constantly. It may take time to establish before flowering, but once settled, it can bloom seasonally and may produce multiple flowers in warm, humid conditions.
Does Tacca grow from a bulb?
Tacca grows from a rhizome, not a bulb. The rhizome stores energy and allows the plant to regrow and bloom again.
Why does Tacca have long whiskers?
The long filaments are thought to help attract pollinators such as flies by mimicking the look of decaying organic matter. While unusual, this is part of the plant's natural pollination strategy.
✍️ More about growing Tacca🛒 Get your own Tacca plant
🎥Watch our videos about Tacca
Date: 15 Jan 2026
Sunshine: I understand. I get emotionally attached very fast too. Mostly to coffee.
Date: 14 Jan 2026
How to clone yourself: Diplazium baby tricks
Peacock Fern (Diplazium proliferum)
👀 How to clone yourself: Diplazium baby tricks
- 🌿 This fern looks normal at first glance - until you look closer. Peacock Fern (Diplazium proliferum) does something unbelievable: it grows tiny baby plants right on its own fronds! Those little clones are called bulbils, and they develop while still attached to the leaf, ready to root and become new ferns. And once those baby plantlets get big enough, you can pin them to soil and they root into brand-new ferns.
- 🌿 In fern books, you might also hear this called a "viviparous" or "proliferous" frond - because the new plants start developing right on the leaf. Basically, the fern is cloning itself in public!
- 🌿 And it gets even better. When new fronds emerge, they curl up tightly and slowly unfurl like tiny baby dragons waking up. This classic fern move is called circinate vernation, and on Peacock Fern it looks especially wild.
- 🌿 A rare, collectible fern and a conversation piece that feels more like a science experiment than a houseplant!
- 🌿 Perfect for shaded, humid spaces and anyone who loves plants that do something unexpected.
🛒 Get the fern that clones itself
📚 Learn more:
- ✦ Diplazium proliferum - Peacock Fern in Plant Encyclopedia
- ✦ Australian Tree Fern rainforest for your yard
#Nature_Wonders #Shade_Garden #Container_Garden
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Date: 14 Jan 2026
Did you know that Tacca is a cat?
🐈 Did you know that Tacca is a cat?
That’s probably the real evolutionary secret no botanist will admit! Those whiskers? Pure marketing genius from nature.
Cats had it figured out first — look mysterious, add long elegant whiskers, and everyone falls in love.
Tacca just took notes and said, “Alright, I can work with that!”
Continue reading: Tacca wants to be a cat! - and everyone loves cats!
Tacca colors: Black, White, Green:
Tacca nivea - White Tacca
Tacca chantrieri - Black Tacca
Tacca leontopetaloides - Green Tacca
🛒 Add Get your own Bat Head Lily Tacca
📚 Learn more:
- Tacca Lily in Plant Encyclopedia
- Perfect Halloween plant: Black Bat Lily (Tacca)
- When plants cross into the Gothic: the Darker Bat Lily
- What is the rarest Tacca?
- The mystery of the White Bat Lily - the plant with wings and whiskers
- A flying bat with whiskers
- The rarest Green Tacca - Tacca leontopetaloides
- When Bat Head Devil Flower is in bloom
- Bat Head - Devil Flower
#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #Nature_Wonders
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Date: 13 Jan 2026
Bet how many cups he can jump at the end?
Cat Pelmen jumping over cups barrier
Bet how many cups he can jump at the end?
"I don't think limits." - Usain Bolt
🐈📸 Cat Pelmen and his new athlete record - TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.
#PeopleCats #Quotes
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 13 Jan 2026
A dancing water nymph revealed!
Habenaria repens - Dancing Water-Spider orchid, Floating Orchid, flower spike
Habenaria repens - Dancing Water-Spider orchid, Floating Orchid, flower close up
Habenaria repens - Dancing Water-Spider orchid, Floating Orchid, flower close up
Habenaria repens - Dancing Water-Spider orchid, Floating Orchid, flowers
💃 A dancing water nymph revealed!
Habenaria repens - the tiny Dancing Water-Spider orchid, Floating Orchid, a dancing fairy, sprite, sylph, pixie - or a water nymph?
- 💞 If you look closely, this native orchid really does look like it is dancing. The tiny, spidery flowers of Habenaria repens seem to hover in motion, giving rise to its charming common name - Water-spider Bog Orchid, also called Floating Orchid.
- 💞 Habenaria repens is one of the few orchids that can live both on land and in water. It naturally grows in wet ditches, marshes, meadows, and along pond and lake edges, and it can even form floating mats in still water. In warm climates, it may bloom almost year-round, sending up tall flower spikes packed with 10-50 delicate greenish-white blooms. The narrow, spider-like petals and lip are designed to attract pollinators, while the light green sepals blend perfectly into wetland surroundings.
- 💞 This orchid produces several yellow-green leaves along its stem, with smaller leaves near the flower spike. It prefers consistently moist to wet conditions and slightly acidic soil. In cultivation, it does best in bog gardens, shallow pond margins, alongside carnivorous plants like pitcher plants, or even in containers kept very wet.
- 💞 Small, subtle, and easy to overlook at first glance, Habenaria repens rewards anyone who stops and looks closely. Once you see that little flower dancing, you will never forget it.
❓ What does this tiny flower look like to you?
A dancing fairy, sprite, sylph, pixie - or a water nymph?
🛒 Add Dancing Spider Orchid to your rare plant collection
📚 Learn more:
Habenaria repens - Water-spider Bog Orchid, Floating Orchid in Plant Encyclopedia
#Nature_Wonders #Container_Garden
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Date: 12 Jan 2026
Watch how to squeeze natural shampoo from the Ginger!
Shampoo Ginger, Zingiber zerumbet, Pine Cone Ginger
💄 Watch how to squeeze natural shampoo from the Ginger!
🎆 Shampoo ginger uses and fragrance
Shampoo Ginger, also known as Zingiber zerumbet or Pine Cone Ginger, is one of those plants that sounds too good to be true - but isn’t. This tropical ginger has been used for centuries not just as an ornamental plant, but as a practical, fragrant, everyday resource.
🎆 Natural shampoo from a flower cone
The most famous use of shampoo ginger comes from its bright red, pine cone-shaped flower bracts. When the cones mature, they fill with a milky, slippery liquid. Simply squeezing the cone releases this natural cleanser, traditionally used as shampoo in Asia and Hawaii. It gently cleans hair, leaves it soft, and adds a light, fresh scent. Even today, extracts of shampoo ginger are still used in commercial shampoos and hair products.
🎆 Fragrance throughout the entire plant
Shampoo ginger isn’t just useful - it smells amazing. The leaves, stems, and cones all carry a warm, spicy fragrance typical of true gingers. The scent is fresh and clean, with earthy and slightly citrusy notes. Because of this, the plant has also been used in traditional body rinses, hair treatments, and natural perfumes.
🎆 More than hair care
Beyond shampoo, the cones are popular as long-lasting cut flowers, often used in tropical floral arrangements. The plant itself grows into a lush, leafy clump that adds strong tropical character to gardens, especially in warm, humid climates.
🎆 A plant with a traveling history
Shampoo ginger is also known as a “canoe plant.” Ancient Polynesian voyagers intentionally carried it across the Pacific as they settled new islands. Its usefulness, fragrance, and beauty made it valuable enough to earn a place on long ocean journeys.
Shampoo ginger is a rare mix of beauty, history, fragrance, and function - a plant that proves some of the most interesting garden plants are also the most practical.
🛒 Get your own natural shampoo from Pine Cone Ginger
📚 Learn more:
- 🔴Zingiber zerumbet in Plant Encyclopedia
- 🔴Do you have Shampoo Ginger in your garden?
- 🔴Free natural shampoo: squeeze it and see what comes out!
- 🔴What Ginger makes a natural shampoo
- 🔴5 most spectacular Ginger species
#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden #Remedies #Discover #Food_Forest
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Date: 12 Jan 2026
Cherry of the Rio Grande quick compote: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
Cherry of the Rio Grande quick compote over pancakes
Eugenia aggregata - Cherry of the Rio Grande fruit
🍴 Cherry of the Rio Grande Quick Compote
This fast cherry compote is made from Cherry of the Rio Grande (Eugenia aggregata). It is tart, rich, and perfect over pancakes, waffles, toast, or warm bread.
Ingredients
- 1 cup Cherry of the Rio Grande fruit, pitted
- 2 to 4 tablespoons water
Instructions
- Place cherries and water in a small saucepan.
- Simmer over medium heat until the cherries soften and release juice.
- Mash lightly with a spoon for a chunky texture.
- Spoon warm compote over pancakes or bread and serve immediately.
🛒 Plant Cherry of the Rio Grande
📚 Learn more:
- Eugenia aggregata - Cherry of the Rio Grande in Plant Encyclopedia
- Don't plant cherries until you see this one!
- Ten best fruit trees to grow in Florida and Southern landscapes. Tropical Cherries: Eugenias
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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Date: 11 Jan 2026
Did you know why its an Akee time, too?
🍊 Did you know why it's an Akee time, too?
Akee (Ackee) starts fruiting late Summer through Fall, but we still have some fruit on the trees through the Winter!
🐈📸 Cat Bob with his Ackee fruit at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden
#PeopleCats
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Date: 11 Jan 2026
How to cook perfect Ackee?
How to cook perfect Ackee?
📱
🛒 Plant Ackee tree for delicious vegetable
📚 Learn more:
- Learn about Ackee from Plant Encyclopedia
- Ackee skillet scramble
- Ackee breakfast scramble with hot peppers
- Banned Jamaican fruit: why you never see fresh Akee in U.S. stores
- Akee taste of deliciousness
- Are these new Christmas ornaments? Ackee monster fruit!
- What is number one tree-grown vegetable? Akee - Jamaican fruit that is actually a vegetable growing on a tree
📱 What is Akee - Jamaica's National Fruit - and how to grow it
📱 How to cook perfect Akee?
#PeopleCats #Fruit_Forest
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