Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 2 Feb 2026

Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection

Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection
💕 Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection

These plants communicate love visually and emotionally. They are associated with beauty, admiration, devotion, and long-lasting relationships.

  • 💖 1. Anthurium

  • With its unmistakable heart-shaped spathes, anthurium is one of the strongest visual symbols of love. In Latin America, it represents hospitality, passion, and enduring affection, making it a natural Valentine plant.

👉 Anthurium gift

  • 💖 2. Orchids

  • In many Asian cultures, orchids symbolize refined love, fertility, and deep emotional connection. They are associated with elegance, respect, and long-term devotion rather than fleeting romance or infatuation.

👉 Orchid gift

  • 💖 3. Valentine’s Sweetheart Hoya (Hoya kerrii)

  • Hoya kerrii is known for its thick, heart-shaped leaves, making it one of the clearest visual symbols of love. This long-lived vine represents loyalty and lasting commitment, and is found in several varieties with different leaf variegation patterns: regular green leaf, variegated Moonlight (gold on green) and Sunshine (white-and green).

👉 Sweetheart Hoya gift

  • 💖 4. Plumeria (Frangipani)

  • In Polynesia and Southeast Asia, plumeria represents love, beauty, and new beginnings. In Hawaii, its flowers are a classic part of leis and have become an enduring symbol of romance, affection, and island love.

👉 Plumeria gift

  • 💖 5. Jasminum sambac

  • Jasmine Sambac is strongly associated with romance, devotion, and spiritual love. In Hawaii it is used in leis, while in the Philippines, this so-called Sampaguita jasmine symbolizes purity, fidelity, and deep affection and is woven into garlands for lovers, weddings, and sacred ceremonies.

👉 Jasmine Sambac gifts

  • 💖 6. Hibiscus

  • Hibiscus symbolizes delicate beauty, attraction, and the fleeting intensity of passion. In many tropical cultures, it is associated with feminine energy and romantic expression.

👉 Hibiscus gift

  • 💖 7. Clerodendrum Bleeding Heart

  • Clerodendrum thomsoniae, called the Bleeding Heart Vine, is known for its red, heart-like flowers held inside white lantern-shaped bracts. It has long been associated with love, emotional vulnerability, and deep personal bonds, making it a natural fit for Valentine symbolism.

👉 Bleeding Heart gift

💖 8. Stephanotis (Madagascar jasmine)
Traditionally associated with marital happiness and fidelity, Stephanotis has long been used in wedding garlands and bouquets in tropical regions.

🛒 Explore gift plants
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Date: 1 Feb 2026

Valentines plants from around the world that symbolize love, connection, and appreciation

Valentines plants from around the world that symbolize love, connection, and appreciation
💕 Valentine’s plants from around the world that symbolize love, connection, and appreciation

  • 💘 When we think of Valentine’s plants, roses usually steal the spotlight. But in many parts of the world, love has long been expressed through tropical plants - not only through flowers, but also through scent, ritual, shared food, and sensory experience.

  • 💘 Across cultures, tropical plants have symbolized romance, friendship, devotion, fertility, desire, and emotional connection. Some speak through heart-shaped leaves and fragrant blooms. Others through taste, warmth, and the way they bring people together.

  • 💘 Love beyond flowers? Together, these tropical plants show that love is expressed in many ways - through beauty, scent, taste, ritual, warmth, and shared moments. Valentine’s traditions around the world remind us that love is not only something we see, but something we experience with all our senses.

  • 💘 In our upcoming collection we will explore Valentine’s plants from the tropics, grouped by how they express love:

  • 💖 1. Plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection
  • 💖 2. Plants of friendship, appreciation, and shared connection
  • 💖 3. Plants of love, desire, and the senses

  • 👉 Stay tuned, coming up next:

  • Plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection


🛒 Explore gift plants
🎁 Get a Gift Card

📚 Learn more:
Valentines day Best Gift Plant Ideas

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Date: 31 Jan 2026

Pitomba pop cups: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Pitomba pop cups: quick-n-fun exotic recipes Pitomba pop cups: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
🍴 Pitomba pop cups: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

  • 🟡Scoop pitomba pulp into a bowl and mix with a drop of honey.
  • 🟡Freeze until icy-soft for a tart tropical snack.


🌿 About the plant:
Pitomba (Eugenia luschnathiana) is a tropical fruit native to Brazil, prized for its bright, citrusy pulp with a sweet-sour kick. The flavor is often compared to a mix of apricot, citrus, and mild resin, making it refreshing and snack-worthy straight from the fruit.

🌱 In the garden:
Pitomba grows as a small to medium-sized slow growing tree with glossy evergreen leaves. It thrives in warm climates, prefers full sun to light shade, suitable for USDA zones 10-11, it can also be grown in large containers and responds well to pruning, making it manageable for home gardens.

🛒 Plant exotic Pitomba cherry in your garden

📚 Learn more:
▫️ Eugenia luschnathiana - Pitomba - in Plant Encyclopedia

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Date: 30 Jan 2026

Start a garden

Start a garden
😳 Start a garden

"Life begins the day you start a garden." - Chinese proverb

🐈📸 Cat Persephone - the Guard of TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

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Date: 29 Jan 2026

How to make Sapodilla fruit profusely?

Sapodilla - Manilkara or Achras zapota, the Brown Sugar Fruit

🍊How to make Sapodilla fruit profusely?

Sapodilla - Manilkara or Achras zapota), the Brown Sugar Fruit is a warm-climate evergreen fruit tree that can produce a lot of fruit once conditions are right. So why do so many sapodilla trees grow beautifully, flower heavily, and still refuse to set fruit?

Sapodilla Fruit Production - What Really Matters

1. 🌳 Choose the Right Tree
Grafted or air-layered trees fruit much sooner - typically in 1-2 years - and more reliably than seedlings, which may take 6–8+ years.
Some varieties are more profuse producers than others. For example, Silas Woods is virtually everbearing, Hasya is commercial prolific producer, Oxkutzcab (or Ox) -is also heavily productive (learn more about varieties).

2. ☀️ Environment: Heat, Sun & Water Balance

Temperature and Humidity
Excessive heat above 90F and low humidity can cause flowers to dry up and fall before setting fruit.
Solution: Provide filtered light or shade during the hottest part of the day to reduce heat stress on blossoms.

Water
Sapodillas are drought tolerant, but consistent moisture during flowering and fruit set improves fruit retention.
Avoid waterlogged conditions - soggy soil can stress roots and reduce yield.

Sun Exposure
Full sun is best for growth and flowering - but for hot climates, protection during peak afternoon heat helps reduce flower drop.
Young trees can also suffer sunburn.

3. Fertilization: Feed for Fruit, Not Just Foliage
Good nutrition is critical for flowers to turn into fruit. Apply a routine feed through the growing/flowering season - contolled-release (Green Magic) or liquid (Sunshine C-Cibus) both work.
Balanced fertilizer with trace elements like Boron (B), Molybdenum (Mo), Iron (Fe), and Copper (Cu) is essential for fruit set and development. Boron & Molybdenum deficiency as a frequent cause of flower/fruit drop in container-grown trees (nutrients get depleted quickly in pots).
Micro-nutrient sprays 2-3 times per year help improve fruit retention and quality. Some growers use sugar boosters (Sunshine Honey) or micronutrient blends that include Mo & B to help fruit set (Sunshine Superfood).

4. 🐝 Pollination - Often Overlooked
Sapodilla flowers are small and often require pollinators for best fruit set.
In some regions, small insects like thrips are key pollinators.
In places with low insect activity, hand pollination dramatically increases fruit set - brushing pollen from one flower to another with a small paintbrush during peak bloom times can help.
Placing fruit scraps (apple peels/banana peels) under the tree to attract beetles is an inexpensive way to boost insect activity.

5. ✂️ Pruning and Tree Structure
Moderate pruning can help open the canopy for better light penetration and air circulation, which supports flowering and reduces stress. Training young trees promotes a strong branch structure that can carry more fruit later. Sapodilla flowers on young growth (tips of the branches).

6. Pot vs Ground: Size Matters
If your sapodilla is in a container, root bound trees struggle with fruit set because roots run out of space and nutrients - stepping up to a larger container or planting in the ground can help.
Root-bound trees often bloom but fail to develop fruit.

7. 📅 Patience & Timing
Even healthy trees can take years to start fruiting well.
Trees often flower repeatedly but only set fruit when environmental conditions and pollination align - especially important for young or newly planted trees.

📌 Summary Checklist for Better Sapodilla Fruiting
  • ✔️ Choose a grafted variety (faster, more reliable fruit).
  • ✔️ Manage heat & humidity - shade during hot hours.
  • ✔️ Water consistently but avoid waterlogging.
  • ✔️ Fertilize balanced NPK + micronutrients (include B & Mo).
  • ✔️ Encourage pollination


🛒 Grow your own Sugar Fruit

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