Date: 12 Dec 2025
🎄 Holiday Plant Market:
Saturday, Dec 13, 2025, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM 🎉
Smokey: We invited people, so we need to be prepared for the crowd.
Sunshine: I am prepared. I saw yummy donuts on the flyer.
Smokey: Of course you did, genius. You are responsible for donuts
and coffee.
It is almost here. Our big end-of-season Plant Day. All year we grow the rare and unusual plants that will be featured at this event, and Saturday is the day they finally meet their new homes. The garden turns into a small holiday escape: fresh air, bright colors, music, snacks, and the PeopleCats greeting everyone like they have known you for years.
Meet PeopleCats crew in charge






Why you should come
It is December in Florida - warm breeze, sunshine, and perfect planting weather. While the rest of the country is scraping frost off windshields, you're choosing which banana tree to take home. Come enjoy a colorful Saturday surrounded by plants, music, snacks, and friendly PeopleCats. This is your holiday escape, your plant-hunting adventure, and your chance to bring home something amazing before the season ends.
Not Local?
Not everyone is lucky enough to live close by. For our online customers, here is 20% for online orders:
EVENT2025
Valid for online orders only. Minimum order $120 (excluding shipping and handling). Cannot be combined with any other discounts, coupon codes, automatic promotions, or special offers. Not valid on previous purchases. One use per customer. Code must be entered at checkout. Offer valid through the end of Sunday, 12/14/2025
Date: 25 Dec 2025
Do not throw out your poinsettia - 4 simple tips how to keep it alive for next Christmas
Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima veriegated leaves
Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima - white, pink and red
Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima - white and red
Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima - in a pot
🎄 Do not throw out your poinsettia - 4 simple tips how to keep it alive for next Christmas
Poinsettias - Euphorbia_pulcherrima - are tender perennials, not one-season plants. After the holidays they naturally fade, rest, and regroup. With a few simple care tweaks, a healthy plant can live all year and rebloom next winter.
🎄 1. Let it rest after the holidays
- ✦ Flowering ends naturally - faded bracts and some leaf drop are normal.
- ✦ Prune when bracts fall: cut stems back by 1/3 to 1/2, leaving 4-5 inches.
- ✦ Wear gloves - the sap can irritate skin.
- ✦ Move to a cooler, bright spot for 4-6 weeks.
- ✦ Ideal temp: 55-60°F
- ✦ Reduce watering.
- ✦ Water only when the top 2 inches of soil are dry.
- ✦ Avoid soggy soil.
🎄 2. Repot in late spring
- ✦ New growth usually starts in late spring.
- ✦ Repot at this stage to refresh nutrients and give roots space.
- ✦ Use a well-draining, slightly acidic potting mix.
- ✦ Choose a pot only slightly larger, with drainage holes.
- ✦ Loosen roots gently and remove old compacted soil.
- ✦ Water lightly, then place in a bright, warm spot.
- ✦ Resume regular watering and light feeding through spring and summer.
🎄 3. Adjust care during the growing season
- ✦ Increase temperature gradually to 64-68°F.
- ✦ Water more often once growth resumes.
- ✦ Wilted or curling leaves signal thirst.
- ✦ Water thoroughly and evenly.
- ✦ Bright light is key, but avoid harsh direct sun.
- ✦ Use sheer curtains or a grow light if needed.
- ✦ Fertilize periodically with a balanced houseplant fertilizer.
- ✦ Pinch back new shoots in late spring for a fuller, bushier plant.
🎄 4. Preparing for winter color
- ✦ In fall, poinsettias need long nights to bloom.
- ✦ Provide 12-14 hours of complete darkness nightly for 6-8 weeks.
- ✦ This triggers colorful bracts in time for the holidays.
❓ Quick FAQ
Can it go outside?
Yes, in warm months only. Bring it indoors before temps drop below 50°F.
Winter outdoors?
No - poinsettias are cold-sensitive and must stay inside.
🎄 Poinsettias don't die after Christmas - they just take a nap. Give them rest, light, and patience, and they will reward you next year.
✍️ Expert reference: Homes and Gardens
🛒 Explore plants for containers
📚 Learn more:
#How_to #Container_Garden
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 27 Dec 2025
Stop planting shade plants until you see this one!
Megaskepasma erythrochlamys - Brazilian plume or Red Cloak
Stop planting shade plants until you see this one!
- 🚩Megaskepasma erythrochlamys - Brazilian plume or Red Cloak is one of my favorite winter colors in the garden. It comes from a plant most people overlook. It keeps pushing bold red flower spikes when many plants slow down.
- 🚩It handles sun or shade, attracts butterflies and hummingbirds, and even surprises people with light cold tolerance. Big leaves, strong structure, and steady color make it a solid choice for beds, fences, or large containers.
- 🚩If your garden needs color that does not quit when the season changes, this one earns its space.
🛒 Get the winter bloomer most gardens are missing
📚 Learn more:
#Hedges_with_benefits #Butterfly_Plants
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 9 Jan 2026
Moringa leaves made simple - daily benefits and 6 easy recipes
🌳 Moringa leaves made simple - daily benefits and 6 easy recipes
Moringa tree is called the Tree of Life for a reason. Moringa leaves, often called miracle greens, are packed with vitamins A, C, and E, calcium, iron, potassium, and plant protein. Regular use supports immunity, digestion, skin health, energy levels, and overall vitality. Traditionally, moringa has also been used to support blood sugar balance, heart health, and inflammation control thanks to its rich supply of antioxidants and bioactive compounds like flavonoids and polyphenols.
❤️ Key benefits of eating moringa leaves daily:
🌿 Supports blood sugar balance
Moringa may improve insulin sensitivity and help stabilize blood sugar, reducing sudden energy crashes. Regular intake has been linked to better glycemic control and reduced inflammation.
🌿 Improves digestion
High fiber supports gut health, while natural detoxifying compounds help liver function. Moringa may also promote healthy gut bacteria and improve digestion regularity.
🌿 Fights inflammation
Moringa leaves contain compounds that help reduce inflammatory markers in the body, supporting joint, heart, and overall cellular health.
6 easy moringa recipes to try
🌿 Moringa laddoo
Roast whole wheat flour in ghee, add fresh moringa leaves, jaggery, nuts, sesame seeds, and cardamom. Shape into laddoos and store airtight.
🌿 Moringa smoothie
Blend fresh moringa leaves, banana, curd, honey, and water. Top with soaked chia seeds and drink fresh.
🌿 Moringa dal
Cook toor dal with turmeric. Saute moringa leaves, onion, tomato, garlic, and chilies in ghee, mix into dal, and finish with cumin and asafoetida tempering.
🌿 Moringa paratha
Knead wheat flour with moringa leaves, onion, spices, and salt. Roll and cook on a hot tawa with oil or ghee.
🌿 Moringa chutney
Grind moringa leaves with coconut, green chilies, ginger, lemon juice, and salt. Serve fresh.
🌿 Moringa tea
Simmer fresh or dried moringa leaves in water for a few minutes, strain, and enjoy warm with honey or lemon if desired.
🛒 Grow your own Tree of Life - Moringa
📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #Trees #Recipes
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
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:
#Nature_Wonders #Shade_Garden #Container_Garden
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

