🔵Add whole jaboticabas and a spoonful of sugar to a skillet over medium heat. 🔵Cook until the skins burst and the fruit releases its deep purple juice. 🔵Stir gently as the mixture thickens into a glossy jam. 🔵Spread warm over toast, biscuits, or even pancakes while still slightly syrupy.
🌿 About the plant:
Jaboticaba, Plinia cauliflora, is famous for its cauliflorous habit - fruit forming directly on the trunk and older branches. During heavy fruiting, the bark can look almost studded with dark purple beads.
🏡 In the garden:
It prefers slightly acidic soil and steady moisture. Mulching helps maintain humidity around the roots. Though slow growing, it can fruit while still relatively small.
🔮 When the World Around Becomes Too
Gray: Plant a Tree. Eat a Donut. Keep going.
Sunshine: Smokey, what do we do when the world around
becomes too gray? Smokey: Plant a tree. Sunshine: And if that does not help? Smokey: Plant another one. Sunshine: And eat a donut. Smokey: Not strictly necessary, but statistically
beneficial.
If you have been feeling a little worn down lately, you are not
alone.
You already know about the headlines. We do not need to list them. You
have probably seen them today before breakfast.
We are not here to pretend that is not happening. It is happening. And
it is a lot.
But here is the thing we keep coming back to, the thing that has been true
for as long as people have had hands and a patch of ground: when the world
feels out of control, you can still plant something.
Gardening is not an escape. It is an answer. When you put a tree in the
ground, you are making a quiet statement. You are saying that you expect
there to be a future. That you intend to be in it. That shade and fruit and
flowers still matter, and you are going to make sure they exist in your
corner of
the world.
That is not naive. That is courageous in the most ordinary and
underrated way.
One tree, planted this season, might give you fruit in a few years. It
might give butterflies somewhere to stop. It might give a bird a place to
nest. It will almost certainly give you something to look at on a hard day
that
reminds you the world still contains beauty, and that you put some of it
there.
And if one tree does not quite do it? Plant another one.
Dostoevsky said beauty will save the world. We think a mango fruiting in
your backyard counts. So does a Magnolia opening on a quiet morning.
Do not skip the donut.
A donut is a small, simple, completely unnecessary thing. That is
exactly the point. It is not productive. It does not solve anything. It is
just
good, and sometimes that is the whole reason. In a world that constantly
demands
you be useful and informed and concerned, eating a donut is a quiet act of
being human. You are allowed to enjoy a small thing on a hard day. You do
not
have to earn it.
Rest a little. Then go put something in the ground. Anything that will
grow and flower and remind you that beautiful things are still happening
whether the headlines mention them or not.
We just finished harvesting loquats
and mulberries,
and now another wave is coming in - low chill plums,
peaches, and nectarines fresh from the garden. This is one of
the most rewarding times of the year, when every season brings the fruit of
your labor and all that work finally turns into something sweet.
Smokey and Sunshine HIRING NOW: Customer service / sales in garden center
Smokey and Sunshine HIRING NOW
👨Smokey and Sunshine HIRING NOW: Customer service / sales in garden center
Sunshine: Smokey, we need plant people. Smokey: Does your girlfriend know plants? Sunshine: Of course. She fertilized my donuts so they would grow larger. Smokey: Did it work? Sunshine: Kind of. I gained three pounds.
TopTropicals.com is looking for a part-time customer service and sales team member for our Ft Myers Garden Center.
If you genuinely love plants, enjoy helping people, and don't mind getting your hands dirty in a tropical nursery environment – then working with rare tropical plants, fruit trees, and fellow plant lovers can be fun and rewarding!
💼 Responsibilities
· Help walk-in customers select plants and check out
· Answer customer questions by phone, email, social media, and message board
· Open and close office, operate cash register
· General customer service and sales support
📚 Requirements
· Genuine love for plants and willingness to learn. We will train
· Friendly, patient, and polite with customers
· Strong work ethic and reliability; punctuality is essential
· Ability to follow instructions and work efficiently
· Must be able to lift up to 50 lbs and comfortable working outdoors in Florida heat and weather
· Drug-free - background check and drug test upon employment
· Valid Florida driver's license and reliable transportation
· Must love cats - our famous "PeopleCats" helpers patrol the gardens daily
Preferred qualifications
· Basic computer skills (email, office, internet). We will train · Previous plant knowledge or nursery experience · Sales or customer service experience
💰 Pay
· Starting pay: $18/hour depending on experience and performance · Opportunity for growth based on performance
📅 Schedule
· Part-time to start, potential for full-time later · Friday and Saturday, 9 am - 4 pm
📍 Location:
Top Tropicals Garden Center
13890 Orange River Blvd
Ft Myers, FL 33905
✍️ How to apply:
Please email a brief resume and a short paragraph explaining why you'd like this job.
Resume guidelines: · Keep it brief; include job history and education · Please avoid long descriptions of unrelated experience · Tell us why working with plants and people interests you
🚶➡️ To apply in person:
You are welcome to visit our Garden Center during business hours:
Monday-Saturday, 9 am - 4 pm
To apply in person, ask for Kristi - our manager.
No phone calls please.
Thanks for applying - we hope to see you working alongside our plants, #PeopleCats, and fellow plant lovers soon.
The Tropical Survivor: Why This Pink Plume Defied a 25F Freeze
Justicia carnea - the Pink Brazilian Plume
Justicia carnea - the Pink Brazilian Plume in a pot
The Tropical Survivor: Why This Pink Plume Defied a 25F Freeze
When Central Florida temperatures plummeted to 25F for two days, many gardeners braced for a total loss; and while most tropicals melted into black mush, Justicia carnea - the Pink Brazilian Plume or Jacobinia - proved that looks can be deceiving.
Brazilian Plume Plant Facts
Botanical name: Justicia carnea, Jacobinia carnea Also known as: Brazilian Plume, Flamingo Flower
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
Tougher Than it Looks
As many other tropical plants from Acanthaceae family - Justicia plants are much hardier than they look.
At first glance, the Brazilian Plume looks like a greenhouse diva. It boasts huge, lush leaves and giant, cotton-candy pink flower clusters. However, it harbors a secret: it behaves more like a hardy perennial than a delicate shrub.
Even when a hard freeze burns the top growth to the ground, the root system remains remarkably resilient. Once the soil warms, fresh shoots often push through the dirt faster than expected.
A Hummingbird Magnet for the Shade
The real draw of Justicia carnea isn't just its survival skills - it’s the show-stopping blooms.
Large upright plumes can reach the size of a football. The tubular flowers are a primary target for hummingbirds and butterflies. Unlike most tropical bloomers, it thrives in filtered light and bright shade, making it perfect for understory planting.
👉 Gardener’s Tip:
Don't dig it up too soon! Freeze-damaged stems may look finished for weeks, but patience usually rewards you with new growth by late spring.
🌱 Quick Care Guide
Light: Bright shade or filtered sun Soil: Rich, well-draining Water: Regular moisture during heat Best For: Pool areas, woodland gardens, and pollinator beds
For gardeners wanting that high-impact tropical aesthetic without the heartbreak of constant replanting, this Jacobinia is the ultimate comeback kid.