Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 15 Dec 2025

Thank you for coming to Plant Market in Ft Myers

Kristi  Vanbenschoten,  Top  Tropicals  manager,  holding  Persephone  the  cat
    on  her  shoulder  in  the  garden

Kristi Vanbenschoten, Top Tropicals manager, and Persephone the cat

Thank you to everyone who came out and supported our Holiday Plant Market last Saturday, December 13, 2025. It was great to see familiar faces, meet new visitors, and watch the garden fill with people exploring, asking questions, and choosing new plants to take home. Our CatsPeople were busy greeting guests, supervising carts, and making sure everyone felt welcome. Your support and good energy are what make these events special for us. We hope your new plants settle in beautifully, and we look forward to seeing you back in the garden soon!

Check out Event Mementos

Persephone  the  cat  at  Garden  Event

Date: 20 Dec 2025

🎄 From our home and garden to yours!

Christmas  yard  decoration  showing  a  festive  holiday  train  with  Santa,  a
    snowman,  and  gift-filled  cars  displayed  on  a  front  lawn  in  a  warm-climate 
 neighborhood.

Hello friends,

From our home and garden to yours, we wish you a warm and peaceful holiday season. Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, as it comes to a close, Kwanzaa, Feliz Navidad, the New Year, or all of the above, we hope your days are filled with light and the promise of what is growing ahead.

Gardening connects us across seasons, cultures, and traditions, and we are grateful to share this journey with you.

Date: 4 May 2026

🎉 Work First. Celebrate Anyway. That Is the Plan.

Sunshine  cat  holding  large  mango  tacos  in  a  garden  nursery  while  Smokey
   works  on  laptop  with  margarita  and  donuts  on 
 table
Smokey: Work first. Celebrations later.
Sunshine: I am celebrating efficient workflow.
Smokey: Impressive. Somehow your workflow smells like tacos.
Sunshine: I assembled mango tacos. Join my festivities.

Cinco de Mayo has a way of sneaking up the right way. The weather settles, the evenings stretch a little longer, and suddenly everything moves outside - plants, people, and whatever happens to be for lunch. It is the kind of day where you stay out longer than planned, something cold is sweating on the table, and dinner becomes whatever sounds good.

This year, it was mango tacos. Not a recipe we planned - just a few ripe mangoes that needed a purpose and the kind of lazy inspiration that shows up around 5pm in the garden. Nothing complicated. Just something warm from the pan and a quick assembly that somehow feels like a celebration.

Mango Plant Facts

Botanical name: Mangifera indica
Also known as: Mango
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large tree taller than 20 ftSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryYellow, orange flowersPink flowersEdible plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant
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It's funny how a good meal can send you down a rabbit hole. One bite of something fresh and you start wondering where it came from, whether you could grow it yourself, and how much better it might taste if you did.

That is really the point. A small shift from planning to picking, where the line between the garden and the kitchen starts to blur. If you are growing fruit, or thinking about it, this is your reminder: the best meals usually start about ten feet from your back door.

🛒 Start with one plant - Shop Fruit Trees

Date: 17 Mar 2026

Move Over, Paddy: Why March 17th is Actually the International Day of the Cat Lady

March 17th - International Day of the Cat Lady, Gertrude with cats

March 17th - International Day of the Cat Lady, Gertrude with cats

Move Over, Paddy: Why March 17th is Actually the "International Day of the Cat Lady" ☘️ 🐈

When you think of March 17th, you probably think of green beer, shamrocks, and parades. But while everyone else is toasted to St. Patrick, a subset of gardeners and feline enthusiasts are celebrating a different icon: St. Gertrude of Nivelles. She 's the 7th-century abbess who skipped the noble marriage proposals to become the unofficial Patron Saint of Cats, Gardeners, and anyone who really, really hates mice.

🐾 From Noblewoman to Monastery Boss



Born in 626 AD (modern-day Belgium), Gertrude wasn't your average medieval teenager. When her family tried to marry her off to a rich duke, she famously told them she’d rather be a bride of Christ than any man on Earth.
She eventually ran the Nivelles monastery like a pro, turning it into a 5-star medieval hub for travelers, scholars, and pilgrims. But it isn't her hospitality that made her an internet icon 1,300 years later - it’s her "pest control" skills.

🐾 The Mouse-Hater’s Hero



Look at any medieval painting of Gertrude, and you’ll notice something weird: mice are literally climbing up her staff. In the Middle Ages, mice weren't "cute Disney sidekicks." They were grain-destroying, plague-spreading menaces. Gertrude became the go-to saint for:

Protecting the harvest from rodents.
Keeping the pantry mouse-free.
Calming the nerves of people with a serious case of musophobia (fear of mice).
The Logic: If you’re the saint of mice, you’re naturally the BFF of the creature that eats them.

🐾 How She Became the "Cat Lady Saint"



Interestingly, Gertrude wasn't "officially" the saint of cats for most of history. That title actually went viral in the late 20th century.

A 1981 Metropolitan Museum of Art catalog highlighted her rodent-fighting reputation, and the world’s cat lovers basically said, "Hold my catnip". The association stuck instantly. Today, she’s the patron saint of the "Original Cat Lady" aesthetic, celebrated by anyone who knows that a home isn't a home without a feline supervisor.

🐾 A Big Day for Green Thumbs



If you’re a gardener, March 17th is your "Green Flag" day. In European folklore, St. Gertrude’s feast day is the traditional start of the planting season.

👉 Pro-Tip from the Middle Ages: If the sun is out on March 17th, it’s a sign that your garden will thrive all year. If it’s raining? Well, maybe stay inside and pet the cat.

🐾 The Perfect Trio: Cats, Gardens, and Gertrude



There’s a reason plant people and cat people are often the same people. Cats love a good garden patrol - they nap in the mulch, stalk the butterflies, and ensure no chipmunk dares to touch your tomatoes.

At TopTropicals, we take this tradition seriously. Our PeopleCats are more than just pets; they are the furry CEOs of the nursery, supervising every seed we plant and every leaf we prune.

🐾 Meet the PeopleCats:


The furry supervisors of the garden world!

🐾 This March 17th, Wear a Little Extra Fur



Whether you’re Irish or not, take a moment this March 17th to raise a glass (or a bag of treats) to St. Gertrude.

This year, let’s celebrate:
🐾 The Feline Patrol: For keeping our gardens mouse-free.
🐾 The Gardeners: For braving the dirt to grow something beautiful.
🐾 The Abbess: For being the coolest historical figure you'd never heard of.

📚 Learn more:
St. Gertrude of Nivelles: Patron Saint of Cats, Gardeners, and Those Who Fear Mice!

#PeopleCats #Horoscope #Fun_Facts

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals and 🐈PeopleCats.Garden

Date: 25 Feb 2026

A Miracle in the Garden: Watching a Tiger Swallowtail Rebuild Itself on a Magnolia Champaka - Joy Perfume Tree

Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly

A Miracle in the Garden: Watching a Tiger Swallowtail Rebuild Itself on a Magnolia Champaka - Joy Perfume Tree 🐯

Tiger Swallowtail Metamorphosis: From Cocoon to Joy

🏼 Nature’s most mind-blowing magic trick happened right here on a branch of our Magnolia champaka - the Joy Perfume Tree. Did you know that when a caterpillar enters its chrysalis (cocoon), it literally dissolves its body and rebuilds it from scratch?

🏼 This Tiger Swallowtail chose the legendary Joy Perfume Tree as its nursery. It’s a match made in heaven—the "flying tiger" of North America born on a tree famous for the world’s most expensive perfume scent. While most people know the Champaka for its intensely fragrant flowers, few realize that even the leaves release a soft, sweet aroma when brushed against.

🏼 In this video, you’ll see the rare moment of eclosion - where the butterfly emerges with soft, wrinkled wings and begins the slow process of pumping life into them before its first flight.

🏼 It is a real gem in your garden - not just for fragrance lovers, but for wildlife that clearly loves it too.
Watch this Tiger Swallowtail butterfly being born on a Champaka - Joy Perfume tree!

🛒 Bring the miracle Joy to your garden - the perfume Champaka tree

📚
Everything You Need to Know About the Joy Perfume Tree:
🟡Magnolia (Michelia) champaca - Joy Perfume Tree, Champaka in Plant Encyclopedia

🟡 Growing Guide:


· How to grow Magnolia champaca and get some Joy
· What does a mature Champaka Tree look like? Practical Growing Guide
🟡The Fragrance: What does Joy Perfume flower smell like?
🟡Troubleshooting: Why is my Champaka Tree dropping leaves?

🟡 Comparison:


· Which Champaka tree is better - White or Golden?
· Golden and White Champaka side-by-side
· White Champaka
🟡More:
· When does Champaka tree start blooming?
· Why Champaka is such a popular perfume tree
· Flower of the most expensive perfume
· Article about Champaka

🎥

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden #Trees #Discover

Joy Perfume Tree Plant Facts

Botanical name: Magnolia champaca, Michelia champaca
Also known as: Joy Perfume Tree, Huang Yu Lan, Safa
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyYellow, orange flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsFragrant plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
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