Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 21 Jun 2024

Healthy breakfast, lunch or snack: Avocado toast

Avocado

Avocado

Healthy breakfast, lunch or snack: Avocado toast



Avocado toast is creamy, crisp and so satisfying. It’s a delicious and simple breakfast, snack or light meal!

Ingredients (makes 1 toast):
  • ◾️ 1 slice of bread (thick-sliced whole-grain or rye bread is the best)
  • ◾️ ½ ripe avocado
  • ◾️ Pinch of salt and black pepper


📝 Instructions
  • ◾️ Toast your slice of bread until golden and firm.
  • ◾️ Remove the pit from your avocado. Use a big spoon to scoop out the flesh.
  • ◾️ Spread avocado on top of your toast.
  • ◾️ Sprinkle with a pinch of salt and pepper.


🍿 Enjoy!

🛒 Grow your own Avocado and Pepper plants

#Food_Forest #Recipes #Avocado

🏵 TopTropicals

Date: 6 May 2025

How to grow your own avocado tree?

How to grow your own avocado tree?
Watch Top Tropicals on TV
📺

  • 💚 Growing your own avocado tree has many benefits. You can enjoy fresh, delicious avocados right from your garden.

  • 💚 Avocado trees are attractive, provide shade, and enhance your landscape.

  • 💚 There are many avocado varieties to choose from, offering unique flavors, sizes, and ripening times.

  • 💚 Visit our garden center in Ft. Myers or BFarm in Sebring, FL, and let our fruit tree expert Kristi help you choose the perfect Avocado trees for your garden!


📱 Watch ABC7 Fort Myers News: Avocado Varieties with Kristi at Top Tropicals👇



📚 Learn more about #Avocado
#Food_Forest

🛒 Shop the Top Quality Avocado Varieties Online

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Date: 29 Sep 2024

Discover three must-have fruit
for every tropical garden

Cat  with  tropical  fruit

Q: I love tropical fruit and want to plant all of them but I have room for only a couple of trees. Help me make the best selection.

A: Here is your perfect list for 2+ fruiting plants: every tropical garden must have a Mango Tree, an Avocado Tree, and - you can plant as many as you want - Pineapples! And here is why...

1. Pineapple

Pineapple is a tropical favorite that's incredibly easy to grow, making it a perfect choice for beginners. With minimal care, Pineapples don't take mush space, you can grown them underneath other fruit trees. Plant good varieties, and when you get your crop, plant the tops and you will have your little Pineapple plantation in no time: you'll enjoy sweet, juicy fruit from those little babies in about 18-24 months. Freshly harvested pineapples are delightful in smoothies, salads, or grilled, adding a tropical flair to your garden.

Pineapple

2. Mango

Mango trees are not only a staple in tropical gardens but are also easy to cultivate. They flourish in sunny spots and well-drained soil, requiring little maintenance once established. These vigorous trees can yield an abundance of juicy, flavorful fruit in just a few years. They are perfect for fresh eating or adding to salsas and chutneys. Condo varieties are dwarf trees and can be grown in containers.

Mango  fruit

3. Avocado

Avocado trees are fun to grow and add both beauty and nutrition to tropical gardens. Grafted cultivars start yielding fruit within a few months with proper care. The rich, creamy avocados are a culinary favorite, perfect for salads, spreads, and smoothies. With their lush foliage and bountiful harvests, avocado trees are a fantastic choice for gardeners looking for ease and abundance.

Avocado  fruit

Date: 20 Feb 2026

Florida freeze damage - what to replant after a record cold winter

Magnolia champaka new shoots

Magnolia champaka new shoots

Scratch test on a bark

Scratch test on a bark

❄️ Florida freeze damage - what to replant after a record cold winter

  • 🌱 A record freeze changed Florida gardens



    After the recent record cold across Florida, many gardeners are now seeing the real damage - browned leaves, split stems, collapsed shrubs, and fruit trees that may not recover.
    Some plants surprised us with new growth. Others are clearly gone.
    The practical question is simple: what should you replant so it does not happen again next winter?
    The good news - you can build a more frost-resilient garden without giving up beauty or fruit.
  • 🌱 First - do not rush to rip everything out



    Before replacing anything, check carefully:

Scratch the bark lightly - green underneath means the branch is alive.
  • Wait for consistent warm weather - some plants re-sprout weeks or even months later.
  • Look for growth higher on the stem, not just at the base.
After freezes, many tropicals look worse than they are. Patience often saves money.
  • 🌱 Why some plants survived and others did not


    Freeze survival depends on several factors:

Duration of cold - 2 hours vs 8 hours makes a major difference
  • Microclimate - south-facing walls, wind protection, canopy cover
  • Plant maturity - established roots handle stress better
  • Pre-freeze health - overfertilized, soft growth freezes faster
This explains why two identical plants in the same yard can perform very differently.
  • 🌱 What to replant for a frost-resilient garden



    Instead of replacing losses with the same tender species, consider:

Cold-hardy fruit trees
  • Proven freeze survivors from this winter
  • Shrubs that tolerate brief dips below freezing
  • Layered planting for wind protection

  • When redesigning:
  • Plant tender species closer to structures.
  • Use hardy trees as windbreaks.
  • Avoid low frost pockets.
  • Improve drainage - wet roots freeze faster.
You do not have to remove tropical character. You just have to plant smarter.

✍️ Check the list of freeze survivors:


What tropical plants survived Florida's historic freeze without protection
  • 🌱 Rebuild with strategy, not emotion


    After freeze damage, many gardeners replant quickly - only to repeat the same losses.
    A better approach:

Identify what truly died.
  • Learn which species survived locally.
  • Choose varieties proven in your climate zone.
  • Design with cold in mind.
One freeze can become a turning point. Many Florida gardens become stronger after a hard winter because the plant list gets refined.

🌱 Spring Equinox - a natural reset


The Spring equinox marks equal day and night and the astronomical start of spring. From this point forward, daylight increases and active growth accelerates.
For Florida gardeners, it is a natural reset.
New growth begins. Roots wake up. Replacement planting becomes safer.
This is the right time to rebuild.

🛒 Explore cold tolerant tropical plants and cold hardy Avocados

📚 Learn more:


#Discover #How_to

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 24 Oct 2024

Lula Avocado The Winter Warrior of Florida

Lula Avocado The Winter Warrior of Florida

Lula Avocado – The Winter Warrior of Florida


  • 🟢 Lula is an avocado variety that's tougher than most! Known for its frost resistance, this cultivar is perfect for homeowners and gardeners in Central Florida and around Orlando. In fact, it was once the top commercial avocado in South Florida, thanks to its ability to endure chilly winters and produce heavily even when other varieties might struggle.

  • 🟢 Lula fruits are medium to large, pear-shaped, and sometimes feature a slender neck. Their skin is smooth, with a greenish tint, enclosing pale to greenish-yellow flesh. With a 12-16% oil content, the Lula offers a creamy, rich flavor that’s a delight in guacamole or straight from the fruit. The large, tightly held seed also makes it a reliable producer, minimizing seed sprouting issues during the harvest.

  • 🟢 The harvesting season runs from November to December, offering a long production window that stands out among other avocado varieties. Originally developed from a tree planted by Mrs. Lula Cellon in 1915 near Miami, this variety has proven its early bearing nature and heavy yields, making it ideal for both home gardeners and small orchard owners.

  • 🟢 If you're looking for an avocado tree that thrives in Central Florida's conditions, bears flavorful fruit, and can withstand the cold, Lula is your go-to! Just give it plenty of space to grow tall and enjoy years of delicious harvests.


📚 Learn more about Avocado varieties

🛒 Plant Avocado Lula

#Food_Forest #Avocado

🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals