Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Which adenium is ever-blooming? Discover Flamingo Glow
Adenium Flamingo Glow
Which adenium is ever-blooming? Discover Flamingo Glow
📚 Learn more: #Adenium
🛒 Claim Your Flamingo Glow and discover more Adenium colors
#Container_Garden #How_to #Shade_Garden #Adenium
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- If you've visited our Top Tropicals Farm in Sebring, you've surely noticed our two beautiful ever-blooming Adeniums Flamingo Glow - the favorites that always draw admiration (and wishlists) from everyone! Our 2 Flamingo Glow mother plants we have in 7 gal pots are in bloom most of the time, almost year around, except for the Winter dormancy period.
- We're excited to share some great news: these two stunning Flamingo Glow adeniums cross-pollinated and have produced seeds, and their offsprings are now already blooming! The well-sized 3 year old seedlings have inherited the same vibrant, glowing color as their parents, and we now have a few plants available for sale.
- Desert Rose Flamingo Glow is a dazzling Top Tropicals hybrid (A. arabicum x A. obesum) that adds a splash of tropical elegance to any collection. Its soft pink blooms glow like a flamingo at sunset, gradually deepening from delicate blush to rich rose with darker splashes that illuminate the petals. Compact and easy to grow, this variety has a naturally dwarf habit and forms a beautifully rounded caudex, perfect for containers or bonsai-style displays. A living jewel that glows brighter with time!
📚 Learn more: #Adenium
🛒 Claim Your Flamingo Glow and discover more Adenium colors
#Container_Garden #How_to #Shade_Garden #Adenium
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Discover the health benefits of Katuk: a Superfood for your mind and body
Katuk,Tropical Asparagus - Sauropus androgynus
🏆 Discover the health benefits of Katuk: a Superfood for your mind and body
Lean more:
📚 Tropical Asparagus, Katuk: Grow your own food
📱 How to cook with Katuk
🛒 Add Katuk Superfood to your edible garden today
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover
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- 🌿 Katuk, or Tropical Asparagus (Sauropus androgynus), is a delicious leafy vegetable popular in South and Southeast Asia. Its young shoots, often referred to as tropical asparagus, are highly prized for their taste and high yields.
- 🌿 In Vietnam, Katuk is commonly cooked in soups with crab meat, minced pork, or dried shrimp, while in Malaysia, it’s stir-fried with egg and dried anchovies.
- 🌿 The plant is unique for being one of the few plants that contains vitamin K. It’s also rich in folate, vitamin K, and lutein - nutrients linked to improved memory and reduced cognitive aging.
- 🌿 Katuk thrives in full sun or semi-shade, making it a versatile and healthy addition to your garden or kitchen.
Lean more:
📚 Tropical Asparagus, Katuk: Grow your own food
📱 How to cook with Katuk
🛒 Add Katuk Superfood to your edible garden today
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover
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Pre-hurricane season tips: how to protect your trees from winds
🌪 Pre-hurricane season tips: how to protect your trees from winds
Some trees like mango have deep roots and handle wind well. Others - like our favorites Spathodea campanulata - African Tulip Tree or Tabebuia caraiba - Yellow trumpet tree (in the photos) - need extra care. You've likely seen crooked Tabebuias in South Florida or lost a bushy Tulip Tree to strong winds. Their wide crowns act like sails in a storm.
💨 To help your trees withstand wind damage:
💡 Some remove all leaves from plumeria before a hurricane - it works!
💡 We pruned our Tulip Tree and Ceiba - and they withstood Hurricane Milton while others fell
🛒 Grab your beautiful Tulip Tree and Tabebuia Tree today - support them early for strength and beauty later!
📚Learn more:
Everyone loves these tulips growing on a tree
#How_to #Trees #Discover
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Some trees like mango have deep roots and handle wind well. Others - like our favorites Spathodea campanulata - African Tulip Tree or Tabebuia caraiba - Yellow trumpet tree (in the photos) - need extra care. You've likely seen crooked Tabebuias in South Florida or lost a bushy Tulip Tree to strong winds. Their wide crowns act like sails in a storm.
💨 To help your trees withstand wind damage:
- ✅ Stake young trees with strong support - use a tripod-style setup (three bamboo sticks or boards secured around the tree for balance from all sides)
- ✅ Check and adjust supports every 6 months
- ✅ Trim long or rubbing branches - they break first
- ✅ Add extra support if a storm is coming (larger trees benefit from sturdy tripod-style bracing with boards)
- ✅ Lighten bushy growth, less sail = more survival
💡 Some remove all leaves from plumeria before a hurricane - it works!
💡 We pruned our Tulip Tree and Ceiba - and they withstood Hurricane Milton while others fell
- ✅ If a tree falls, stand it up ASAP and support it. Trim broken branches - they’ll remind you what needed pruning before, not after!
- ✅ Trees protected young, grow strong for life.
🛒 Grab your beautiful Tulip Tree and Tabebuia Tree today - support them early for strength and beauty later!
📚Learn more:
Everyone loves these tulips growing on a tree
#How_to #Trees #Discover
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How to Plant a Tree - A Fun Guide
🌳 How to Plant a Tree - A Fun Guide
1️⃣ Dig a Big Hole
Start by digging a hole 2-3 times the size of the pot. Make sure it's deep enough to give your tree's roots room to grow. Remove any sandy dirt or rocks—replace them with rich, nutrient-packed soil to help your tree establish.
2️⃣ Place the Tree Just Right
Gently remove your tree from the pot and place it in the hole. The base of the tree (where the roots meet the trunk) should sit slightly above ground level (2-3"). Avoid covering the trunk with soil to allow for proper air circulation and to promote a healthy tree.
3️⃣ Mound the Soil
Add nutrient-rich soil around the roots, then toss in a handful of granulated fertilizer. With the leftover soil, build a little mound around the tree to form a "bagel" shape. This will help water stay around the roots and give your tree a strong start.
4️⃣ Add Mulch and Water
Spread mulch around the tree, but leave a small gap around the trunk. Water generously to settle the soil and give your tree a refreshing drink. Water by hand daily for the first couple of weeks or until you see new growth. After that, you can rely on sprinklers.
⭐️ With these simple steps, your tree will be off to a great start!
🛒 Go plant shopping to excersize your green thumb and make our planet better
📚Learn more:
How to plant a tree: care of mail-order plants and detailed planting instructions (PDF)
#How_to #Trees #Discover
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1️⃣ Dig a Big Hole
Start by digging a hole 2-3 times the size of the pot. Make sure it's deep enough to give your tree's roots room to grow. Remove any sandy dirt or rocks—replace them with rich, nutrient-packed soil to help your tree establish.
2️⃣ Place the Tree Just Right
Gently remove your tree from the pot and place it in the hole. The base of the tree (where the roots meet the trunk) should sit slightly above ground level (2-3"). Avoid covering the trunk with soil to allow for proper air circulation and to promote a healthy tree.
3️⃣ Mound the Soil
Add nutrient-rich soil around the roots, then toss in a handful of granulated fertilizer. With the leftover soil, build a little mound around the tree to form a "bagel" shape. This will help water stay around the roots and give your tree a strong start.
4️⃣ Add Mulch and Water
Spread mulch around the tree, but leave a small gap around the trunk. Water generously to settle the soil and give your tree a refreshing drink. Water by hand daily for the first couple of weeks or until you see new growth. After that, you can rely on sprinklers.
⭐️ With these simple steps, your tree will be off to a great start!
🛒 Go plant shopping to excersize your green thumb and make our planet better
📚Learn more:
How to plant a tree: care of mail-order plants and detailed planting instructions (PDF)
#How_to #Trees #Discover
🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals
What is the best plant for a carefree flower border
Dietes - African Iris
🔤 What is the best plant for a carefree flower border
Tough, drought-tolerant, flood-tolerant, and cold-tolerant, African Iris is perfect for virtually any type of landscape. It handles heat, sun, and even partial shade like a champ, and it's perfect for xeriscaping, borders, or mass plantings.
🛒 Get African Iris for a low-maintenance, always-blooming showstopper
#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #How_to #Discover
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- How to add effortless elegance in your garden?
- What makes African Iris a must-have?
Dietes - African Iris - is a stunning, exotic beauty with delicate pale yellow flowers and bold maroon markings. It blooms in cycles throughout the warm months, giving your garden a fresh, elegant look time and time again. With its graceful, clumping sword-like foliage, it adds texture year-round. Plus, it thrives on neglect!
Tough, drought-tolerant, flood-tolerant, and cold-tolerant, African Iris is perfect for virtually any type of landscape. It handles heat, sun, and even partial shade like a champ, and it's perfect for xeriscaping, borders, or mass plantings.
🛒 Get African Iris for a low-maintenance, always-blooming showstopper
#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #How_to #Discover
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How to tell the difference between Jasmine Sambac Varieties
Jasminum Sambac varieties
⏳ How to tell the difference between Jasmine Sambac Varieties
Arabian Nights - compact slow growing shrub with small delicate flowers
Belle of India - compact vine with long elegant petals, shade lover
Grand Duke of Tuscany - the most popular, vigorous bush with carnation-like flowers
Grand Duke Supreme - bigger, more vigorous version of Grand Duke with larger flowers
Gundu Malli - new hybrid between Arabian Nights and Grand Duke
Little Duke - more compact version of the Grand Duke
Maid of Orleans - vigorous full sun climber, great for hedges and fences
Mali Chat - very delicate, rare variety, with miniature 3-tier flowers, not easy to establish, shade lover
Mysore Mulli - vigorous vining shrub for sunny or semi-shade locations
🛒 Smell the Difference – Shop Sambac varieties
Learn more:
📚 Jasminum Sambac Absolute Flower - book download
#Perfume_Plants #Hedges_with_benefits #How_to #Discover
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- 💮 Jasminum Sambac is hands down the most fragrant jasmine in existence - and the most popular among tropical gardeners and plant collectors.
- 💮 Native to India, it's the source of jasmine perfume oil and the signature ingredient in jasmine tea.
- 💮 This plant comes in several varieties, each with unique flower size, shape, and growth habit - ranging from compact shrubs to vigorous bushes and climbing vines. It takes both sun and shade and makes a perfect container plant and indoor plant favorite.
- 💮 All varieties of Sambac are equally fragrant. To get more flowers, just use Sunshine Pikake plant booster and enjoy the perfume all day long!
- 💮 At Top Tropicals, we grow every known variety of Jasminum sambac in cultivation:
Arabian Nights - compact slow growing shrub with small delicate flowers
Belle of India - compact vine with long elegant petals, shade lover
Grand Duke of Tuscany - the most popular, vigorous bush with carnation-like flowers
Grand Duke Supreme - bigger, more vigorous version of Grand Duke with larger flowers
Gundu Malli - new hybrid between Arabian Nights and Grand Duke
Little Duke - more compact version of the Grand Duke
Maid of Orleans - vigorous full sun climber, great for hedges and fences
Mali Chat - very delicate, rare variety, with miniature 3-tier flowers, not easy to establish, shade lover
Mysore Mulli - vigorous vining shrub for sunny or semi-shade locations
🛒 Smell the Difference – Shop Sambac varieties
Learn more:
📚 Jasminum Sambac Absolute Flower - book download
#Perfume_Plants #Hedges_with_benefits #How_to #Discover
🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals
How to grow tropical fruit outside the Tropics
How to grow tropical fruit outside the Tropics
👨 Can you grow tropical fruit in colder climates? Absolutely! The key is growing them in containers so you can move them indoors during cold weather. With the right plant selection, a bit of motivation, good plant food, and a little love, you can enjoy a delicious harvest of exotic fruit - enough to treat your family and even share with friends. Here's everything you need to start your own Tropical Fruit Garden in containers.
🏆 Top tropical fruits and expert tips for growing in containers
🛒 Shop top picks for your container tropical garden:
Condo Mango
Cold hardy Avocado
🍒 Tropical Cherries - Eugenias
⭐️ Carambola (Start Fruit)
🍉 Guava
🍈 Annona
🍍 Pineapple
🌶 Herbs and spices - tropical edibles right away
🕙 Fast-fruiting trees
🍊 Shop all fruit trees
Supplies and Boosters
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
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👨 Can you grow tropical fruit in colder climates? Absolutely! The key is growing them in containers so you can move them indoors during cold weather. With the right plant selection, a bit of motivation, good plant food, and a little love, you can enjoy a delicious harvest of exotic fruit - enough to treat your family and even share with friends. Here's everything you need to start your own Tropical Fruit Garden in containers.
🏆 Top tropical fruits and expert tips for growing in containers
- 📌 Top 10 Dwarf "Condo" Mango, great for container culture
- 📌 What are the Condo Mangos - a practical guide
- 📌 How to grow cold-hardy avocados
- 📌 Avocado everyone should have: dwarf Condo Avocado
- 📌 What is the best Avocado variety?
- 📌 The best tropical fruit tree for container: Annona.
- 📌 How to grow your own Carambola
- 📌 Tropical Cherries: Eugenias
- 📌 Peanut Butter Tree and Blackberry Jam Tree produce right away
- 📌 How to grow a Guava Tree: practical guide
- 📌 Coffee as the best Gift plant
- 📌 Top 10 fast-fruiting trees
- 📌 Three must-have fruit for every tropical garden
- 📌 What Fertilizer to Use Now and How?
- 📌 How to make plants green quickly: Green Magic - the fertilizer that truly works
🛒 Shop top picks for your container tropical garden:
Condo Mango
Cold hardy Avocado
🍒 Tropical Cherries - Eugenias
⭐️ Carambola (Start Fruit)
🍉 Guava
🍈 Annona
🍍 Pineapple
🌶 Herbs and spices - tropical edibles right away
🕙 Fast-fruiting trees
🍊 Shop all fruit trees
Supplies and Boosters
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
What flowers do NOT attract bees?
Butterfly on a flower that doesn't attract bees
❌ What flowers do NOT attract bees?
Most tropical flowers bring in pollinators, and bees are usually first in line. But what if you’d rather avoid them? Maybe you’re allergic, or just don’t want bees buzzing around. Good news: some flowers attract butterflies, hummingbirds, moths, or even flies - but not bees.
1. Night-blooming, fragrant - moth and bat flowers
Bees forage by day, so many night-fragrant flowers skip them.
These flowers keep the beauty, fragrance, and wildlife appeal - but without making your garden a bee hotspot.
🛒 Explore butterfly attractors
#Butterfly_Plants #How_to #Discover
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Most tropical flowers bring in pollinators, and bees are usually first in line. But what if you’d rather avoid them? Maybe you’re allergic, or just don’t want bees buzzing around. Good news: some flowers attract butterflies, hummingbirds, moths, or even flies - but not bees.
- 👉 Quick rules:
- ✔️ Night-blooming + strong fragrance = moths or bats, not bees.
- ✔️ Red tubular flowers with little scent = hummingbirds or butterflies, not bees.
- ✔️ Rotten or fermented smell = flies, not bees.
- ✔️ Carnivorous plants = trap insects, no bee nectar.
1. Night-blooming, fragrant - moth and bat flowers
Bees forage by day, so many night-fragrant flowers skip them.
- ▫️Brugmansia - Angel’s Trumpet - big, hanging blooms, moth and bat pollinated.
- ▫️Cestrum nocturnum - Night-blooming Jasmine - powerful night scent, moths only.
- ▫️Hylocereus Dragon Fruit - huge cactus flowers, bats and moths.
- ▫️Brunfelsia - Lady of the Night - sweet fragrance at dusk, no bee interest.
- ▫️Hibiscus - hummingbirds and butterflies visit, bees less so.
- ▫️Heliconis and Gingers - designed for hummingbird beaks, bold tubes are for birds, not bees.
- ▫️More good picks: Ruellia, Sanchezia, Aeschynanthus, Aphelandra, Anisacanthus, Cuphea, Fuchsia, Iochroma, Justicia, Lonicera, Hamelia, Russelia, Odontonema, Tecomaria, Bougainvillea.
- ▫️Amorphophallus (Voodoo Lily) - rotting meat scent.
- ▫️Tacca (Bat Head Lily) - spooky black flowers, fly-pollinated.
- ▫️Stapelia (Carrion Flower) - also fly-pollinated.
- ▫️Aristolochia (Pelican Flower) - giant, bizarre fly-traps.
- ▫️Vanilla orchid - its natural bee pollinator is absent in most regions, so no bee appeal elsewhere.
- ▫️Brassavola nodosa and others - open at night for moths, not bees.
- ▫️Nepenthes (Pitcher Plant) - uses pitchers of liquid to lure and digest insects.
2. Hummingbird and butterfly flowers
Bees don’t see red well. Tubular reds, oranges, and yellows usually go to birds and butterflies.
3. 🐱 Fly-pollinated oddballs
Some flowers smell bad to us but irresistible to flies.
4. 🌸 Specialized orchids
Not all orchids rely on bees. Many use moths, butterflies, or beetles instead.
5. 🕷 Bonus: carnivorous curiosities
Carnivorous plants don’t offer nectar. They trap insects instead, so bees stay away.
These flowers keep the beauty, fragrance, and wildlife appeal - but without making your garden a bee hotspot.
🛒 Explore butterfly attractors
#Butterfly_Plants #How_to #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Yes, you can grow a tropical fruit tree in a pot!
Yes, you can grow a tropical fruit tree in a pot!
If you live where winters get chilly, move the pot indoors or into a greenhouse before frost. Prune lightly in spring to keep shape and airflow. Container trees can fruit heavily if given light, warmth, and consistent care.
At the end of the day, container culture lets you grow the tropics anywhere - from a city balcony to a backyard deck.
➡ Next: The best tropical fruit trees for containers...
📸 Growing and fruiting Soursop in apartment (PDF download)
🛒 Explore tropical fruit trees
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
🍒 If you dream of picking fresh tropical fruit - Mango, Avocado, exotiс Annona and more - but only have a patio, balcony, or small yard, you’re not out of luck. Many tropical fruit trees grow perfectly well in large containers. The key is choosing the right variety, pot, and care routine.
🍒 Pick a compact tree type
🍒 Choose the right pot
🍒 Soil and watering
🍒 Light and feeding
🍒 Cold protection and pruning
Start with a dwarf or semi-dwarf variety. Regular tropical trees can grow huge, but container-sized cultivars stay under 8–10 feet and are much easier to manage. For example, Condo varieties of Mango like Pickering or Ice Cream stay small and still produce full-sized fruit. The same goes for Dwarf Avocados like Wurtz (also called Little Cado) and Sugar apples. Blackberry Jam fruit tree (Randia formosa) and Peanut Butter Fruit tree (Bunchosia argentea) are also excellent choices.
Begin with a 5-gallon container and move up as the tree grows. A mature plant will be happy in a 20–25-gallon pot. Drainage is critical - roots will rot if the pot stays soggy. Use a sturdy plastic, ceramic, or wooden container with multiple holes in the bottom.
These trees all like loose, well-draining soil. Mix potting soil with perlite or pine bark for better aeration. Water deeply but not too often - let the top few inches dry before watering again. Overwatering is the quickest way to kill a potted tropical.
Full sun is a must - aim for at least 6 hours daily. Fertilize during the growing season with a balanced fruit tree or slow-release fertilizer like Green Magic or liquid Sunshine Boosters. Many tropicals appreciate an extra boost of micronutrients like iron and magnesium to keep their leaves green.
If you live where winters get chilly, move the pot indoors or into a greenhouse before frost. Prune lightly in spring to keep shape and airflow. Container trees can fruit heavily if given light, warmth, and consistent care.
At the end of the day, container culture lets you grow the tropics anywhere - from a city balcony to a backyard deck.
➡ Next: The best tropical fruit trees for containers...
📸 Growing and fruiting Soursop in apartment (PDF download)
🛒 Explore tropical fruit trees
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement
🍑 11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement
These fruits aren’t just delicious - they help you meet your daily fiber needs in ways that are far more enjoyable (and sustainable) than taking supplements. And when home gardeners, farmers, or tropical communities grow and share them, it’s a double win: nutrition and tradition hand in hand.
✔️ Tropical fiber power: tips for getting more fiber from tropical fruits
🛒 Plant a fruit tree to harvest your fruit tomorrow
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit health benefits guide - what fruit and edibles can help with health issues and vitamin deficiencies, Part 1 and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
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- When we think of tropical fruit, we picture sweetness, sunshine, and exotic flavors packed with vitamin C. But beneath all that juicy goodness lies another gift: dietary fiber - quietly working to support digestion, feed the gut microbiome, and help keep blood sugar steady.
- Avocado leads the pack among tropical fruits for fiber content. One creamy, ripe fruit can provide around 10 grams of fiber, roughly a third of an adult’s daily need. And there’s more to avocado than fiber - it’s also rich in healthy fats, micronutrients, and that silky texture everyone loves.
- Other tropical fruits bring their own kind of fiber strength. Guava delivers up to 9 grams per cup, plus a burst of vitamin C.
- Mango offers about 3 grams in half a fruit, especially when eaten with some of the skin.
- Pineapple, though not always seen as a fiber powerhouse, still contributes around 2 grams per cup, along with bromelain, the enzyme that helps digestion.
- Jackfruit’s fibrous pulp makes it another standout - it’s so meaty, it’s even used as a plant-based substitute in savory dishes.
- Sapote fruit (Mamey, Canistel) and Sapodilla add fiber with a smooth, custard-like texture.
- Adventurous tropical varieties like Annona (custard apple, soursop) may not top the charts in fiber numbers, but their soft, fibrous flesh still adds value: about 1.3 grams of fiber per 100 grams of fruit.
- Bananas contain both soluble and insoluble fiber; the soluble part (mainly pectin) helps control blood sugar and appetite, while the insoluble fiber aids regularity.
- Mulberries are rich in insoluble fiber, especially in their skin, supporting digestion and promoting healthy bowel movements.
- Dragon fruit offers a mix of soluble fiber in its juicy flesh and insoluble fiber from its tiny edible seeds, which help support gut health and feed good bacteria.
These fruits aren’t just delicious - they help you meet your daily fiber needs in ways that are far more enjoyable (and sustainable) than taking supplements. And when home gardeners, farmers, or tropical communities grow and share them, it’s a double win: nutrition and tradition hand in hand.
✔️ Tropical fiber power: tips for getting more fiber from tropical fruits
- ⏺Eat whole, not juiced. Most of the fiber is in the pulp, skin, and seeds. Juicing removes much of that goodness.
- ⏺Mix it up. Tropical fruits are great, but balance them with legumes, whole grains, nuts, and veggies for a full fiber range.
- ⏺Take it slow. If your diet is low in fiber, increase gradually to avoid bloating or discomfort.
- ⏺Drink plenty of water. Fiber works best when paired with hydration.
- ⏺Mind the ripeness. Unripe fruits can have more resistant starch, another form of fiber.
- ⏺Get creative. Toss tropical fruits into smoothies, salsas, breakfast bowls, or even desserts - a tasty stealth-fiber strategy.
🛒 Plant a fruit tree to harvest your fruit tomorrow
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit health benefits guide - what fruit and edibles can help with health issues and vitamin deficiencies, Part 1 and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals






