Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 24 Nov 2025

One fruit on this tray always stumps people

Tropical fruit on a tray

One fruit on this tray always stumps people

  • 🍉 Another day, another fruit tray from the garden! Even at the end of November, something is always ripening here in Florida. This tray turned out especially fun - a mix of familiar fruits and a couple that always make people guess twice!
  • 🍉 Today’s harvest includes: sweet Persimmons, Star fruit, a few different dragon fruits: yellow Palora and white with red skin - this is Seoul Kitchen. There's also Cocoplum, which makes great drinks. And - ta-da! - the little showstopper of the day: Curly Locks Orchid Cactus fruit (Epiphyllum guatemalense Monstrosa). It looks wild, but it's edible and tastes like a tiny dragon fruit.
  • 🍉 If you live in Florida or any warm climate, growing your own fruit is one of the best gifts you can give yourself. Tropical fruit trees are generous plants - they don’t wait for a season, they give you something month after month. Some days it’s a handful, some days it’s a whole tray, but there’s always a fresh treat waiting. Once you start growing your own food, you realize how easy and rewarding it is to fill your garden with flavor.
  • 🍉 Every tray has a new surprise. Come along and see what the garden gives us next!


🛒 Explore rare tropical fruit

📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Discover

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Date: 19 Dec 2025

Eight best winter blooming trees

💐 Eight best winter blooming trees





🛒 Explore Winter bloomers

#Trees #Discover

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Date: 22 Dec 2025

Center of the world tree that stops traffic in Florida - now fits in a pot

Ceiba Dwarf Pink Princess

🗿 Center of the world tree that stops traffic in Florida - now fits in a pot



🎥 Ceiba Dwarf Pink Princess
  • 🌸 If you’ve ever visited Florida in winter, you’ve probably seen those unbelievable pink trees in full bloom - that’s a Ceiba (Chorisia) speciosa, also known as the Kapok or Pink Silk Floss tree, famous for its hibiscus-like flowers and fluffy silk pods.
  • 🌸 The problem? The classic Ceiba can grow 40 feet tall.
  • This one doesn’t! Ceiba hybrid Dwarf Pink Princess stays compact - about 8-12 feet in the ground and even smaller in a pot.
    And unlike seed-grown trees, this one blooms right away because it’s grafted! No long wait.
  • 🌸 In winter, it drops most of its leaves and explodes into thousands of soft pink flowers. Same wow factor. Just a fraction of the size.
  • Perfect for small yards, patios, balconies, or anyone who wants a show-stopping winter tree without committing to a giant.
  • 🌸 #Fun_facts: the ancient Maya believed the Ceiba was the sacred tree at the center of the world, connecting earth to the sky.
  • 🌸 So yes… You can officially say you’re growing the center of the world in your backyard.


🛒 Plant it now - it fits any garden

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Ceiba speciosa, Chorisia speciosa
Silk Floss Tree, Bombax
USDA Zone: 9-11
Small tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunModerate waterRegular waterPink flowersThorny or spinyPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
  • Ceiba (chorisia) speciosa in Plant Encyclopedia
  • How this breath-taking flowering tree stays so compact

  • #Trees #Nature_Wonders #Container_Garden

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    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

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    Date: 20 Feb 2026

    Top Ten Flowering Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze

    Bauhinia Orchid Tree

    Bauhinia Orchid Tree

    Beaucarnea recurvata - Pony Tail

    Beaucarnea recurvata - Pony Tail

    Caesalpinia mexicana, Mexican Bird of Paradise

    Caesalpinia mexicana, Mexican Bird of Paradise

    Callistemon - Bottlebrush

    Callistemon - Bottlebrush

    Erythrina

    Erythrina

    Jacaranda tree

    Jacaranda tree

    Magnolia figo

    Magnolia figo

    Magnolia Little Gem

    Magnolia Little Gem

    Tabebuia chrysotricha

    Tabebuia chrysotricha

    Tabebuia impetiginosa

    Tabebuia impetiginosa

    🏆 Top Ten Flowering Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze



    These flowering trees had no damage after 3 nights of hard freeze (25F) with NO PROTECTION:
    🛒 Explore cold tolerant tropical plants

    📚 Learn more:


    #Discover #How_to #Trees

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