Fall is just around the corner, but Florida is still full of sunshine and
growing energy!
It’s one of the best times to plant - cooler days are coming, but
there are still months of warmth ahead for your garden to thrive. Our
nursery is bursting with big, healthy plants that grew all summer long -
loaded with blooms, fruit, and lush foliage, ready to shine in your
yard.
Come stroll the gardens with our PeopleCats,
enjoy the most beautiful season for planting, and let us help you find the
perfect picks for your space. Bring your friends and family for a weekend of
fun, color, and fresh ideas - this is your moment to plant, grow, and
enjoy!
30% OFF online prices
FREE plant with any purchase (including Guava)
Gift bags for first 25 customers with $50+ order
Special deals on select plants
Exciting raffle prizes
Green Magic fertilizer FREE samples
The LAST PERFORMANCE of the Famous Hand Pan Lady! (She is moving from
Florida)
See her previous performance at Top Tropicals - here
and here.
When northern gardens fade into gray, our tropicals wake up. Winter is
color season here - and even if you live up north, you can still enjoy these
same flowering trees indoors or on a sunny patio.
From the fiery Royal
Poinciana to the golden Tabebuia and
violet Jacaranda,
these eight trees prove that winter can bloom anywhere
How to Care for Winter-Flowering Trees
We're often asked, at Top Tropicals, “Can I really grow tropical
trees in winter?”
Yes — with the right light and care, you can.
Here’s what works best both outdoors and indoors, according to our
expert, Tatiana Anderson.
🌡️ Fall Planting Guide
Let’s talk about timing, because that’s the part most people
get nervous about.
Everyone asks: “Isn’t it too cool to plant now?” —
and the answer is no!
Fall and early winter are actually the best months for tropicals in Zones 9
to 11.
Here’s why: the air has cooled off, but the soil is still warm.
Roots love that combination. They quietly spread underground while the rest
of
the plant takes a break.
By spring, those roots are ready to feed a burst of new growth — and
that’s when you’ll see the first big flush of flowers.
Pick a sunny spot that gets plenty of light — six to eight hours
if you can.
Loosen the soil and mix in compost or pine bark so it drains well.
Dig a hole about twice as wide as the pot and just as deep.
Set the plant level with the ground, backfill, and water it deeply to
settle everything in.
Then add mulch — two or three inches is plenty — but keep it
away from the trunk so it can breathe.
Tatiana’s tip: “Fall planting builds roots while everyone
else is resting. By spring, your tree wakes up ready to grow.”
🌳 Outdoor Care (Warm Climates Zones 9–11)
Now, let’s talk about what happens after planting — because
real gardening starts once the plant is yours. Tropical trees thrive on
routine: steady sunlight, deep watering, and just a bit of attention.
Water them about once a week when the weather is mild, more often if
it’s dry or windy.
Always check the soil first — if it feels dry two inches down, go
ahead and water.
Mulch helps more than most people realize — it keeps roots cool in
summer and warm in winter, and it saves you from watering as often.
Now, for those of you in Zone 9, here’s the truth: your trees can
take a chill, but they don’t love surprises.
A quick night in the upper 20s F won’t hurt mature plants, but young
ones appreciate a little help — a frost cloth or being planted at the
south side.
And don’t underestimate the wind. Cold, dry gusts can burn leaves
faster than frost.
Use fences, hedges, or taller shrubs as windbreaks, and take advantage of
microclimates — those warm pockets next to the house, brick patios, or
corners that get extra afternoon sun.
Tatiana’s tip: “A tropical garden in Zone 9 isn’t
about fighting nature — it’s about cooperating with it. Find the
warm corners, protect from the cold wind, and your trees will thank you with
flowers all winter.”
🏚️ Indoor & Patio Care (Cooler Climates)
For our northern friends — yes, you can grow tropicals indoors!
You just need good light, warm air, and a little attention.
Pick a large pot, with drainage holes and a light tropical soil mix.
Place it in a bright window — south or southwest if you can —
or under grow lights for about 12–14 hours a day.
Keep temperatures between 65 and 85 F, and water when the top inch of soil
dries out.
Misting helps keep leaves clean and adds humidity.
Rotate the pot every couple of weeks so all sides get sun. In summer, move
your plant outdoors gradually so it can enjoy real sunlight — then
bring it back in before nights drop below 40 F.
Tatiana’s tip: “Don’t be afraid of growing trees in
pots. They adapt beautifully — just select the right trees and pay
attention to their needs.”
🌴 Twilight in the garden. Smokey is holding a glowing
pumpkin. Sunshine is sipping cocoa.
Sunshine: "Smokey, why does that plant look like it wants to fly away?"
Smokey: "That’s the Bat Lily - Tacca. It’s rare, it’s
weird, and it’s in bloom just in time for Halloween."
Sunshine: "Figures. You always find the spooky ones."
Meet the Bat Lily (Tacca)
Tacca is also called the Bat Lily or Devil Flower. This
tropical wonder grows bat-shaped wings and foot-long whiskers. The black
form
(Tacca chantrieri) looks straight out of a gothic dream, while the
white
one (Tacca nivea) is ghost-like and elegant.
Some of our plants are blooming right now in the nursery — true
Halloween magic! Blooms are delicate and may not travel, but the plants are
strong
and will flower again soon in your care.
Black Bat Lily (Tacca chantrieri) with dark maroon wings and long
whiskers
White Bat Lily (Tacca nivea) in bloom with wide ivory wings
"The White Bat Lily (Tacca nivea) is bold and sculptural, with oversized
ivory wings that command attention. Its pale bracts stretch wide above
clusters
of deep maroon flowers, and long, silvery whiskers spill gracefully through
the foliage. In filtered light, the plant seems to glow from within —
elegant, crisp, and perfectly balanced between the strange and the
beautiful.
If I could pick, I’d go with the White Tacca. It feels more
architectural, more balanced — those oversized wings catch light in a
way that
shows off every vein and curve. It looks engineered by nature, almost like
an
alien design prototype that actually works.
The Black Bat Lily (Tacca chantrieri) feels alive with shadow. Its dark
maroon wings and wiry whiskers make it look like something that fluttered
out of
the jungle at dusk. The bloom’s layered structure and near-black sheen
give it a quiet power — mysterious, understated, but impossible to
ignore. But if I were designing mood lighting for a greenhouse at night, the
Black Tacca wins. It’s subtle, mysterious, like a secret only visible
up
close. Together, they’re perfect opposites — yin and yang of the
tropical underworld: white for daylight, black for moonlight." — says
Tatiana Anderson, Top Tropicals Plant Expert
Special Offer: Discounts on Rare Tacca Plants
Grow your own Bat Lilies — White or Black — at a special
Halloween price!
Get 25% OFF Tacca plants with code
TACCA2025
Min order $25 (excluding S/H), valid online only,
cannot be combined with other offers.
Hurry, offer expires
November 03, 2025!
🎃
Storewide Halloween Sale – For Everything Beyond Tacca
Not into spooky plants? Enjoy savings on all other tropical plants
across the store!
Get 15% OFF tropical plants with code
HALLOWEEN2025
Min order $100 (excluding S/H), valid online only,
cannot be combined with other offers.
Sunshine: I'm blazing into the 2026 Year of the Horse! Call me
Mister Fahrenheit. Don't stop me now! 'Cause I'm having a good time —
I'm a shooting star, leaping through the sky like a tiger, defying
the laws of gravity! Smokey: It's jasmine, Tiger. A shrub. Not Wembley. Calm down.
💮
2026 Year of the Horse - and the Plant I Trust Most
By Tatiana Anderson, Horticulture Expert at Top
Tropicals
Every new year carries its own energy.
2026 is the Year of the Horse - a year of movement, fire, momentum, and
bold decisions. It is not a quiet year. It pushes us
forward.
When fellow gardeners ask me what to grow in a year like this, my answer
is simple:
Grow something that balances strength with grace.
For me, that plant is Jasmine Sambac.
In many cultures, Sambac represents devotion, purity, and deep affection.
In the Philippines it is the national flower -
Sampaguita - woven into garlands for weddings and sacred ceremonies. In
Hawaii, it becomes leis - a symbol of welcome and connection -
Pikake. In India, it perfumes temples
and homes.
This is not just a fragrant shrub.
It is a plant tied to love, loyalty, and continuity.
The Horse runs forward.
Jasmine anchors the heart.
In a fiery year like 2026, I believe we need both.
And that is why I always return to Jasminum sambac.
Over the years I have grown thousands of plants, but very few have the
staying power of Jasmine Sambac.
It is not just fragrant. It is intensely, unmistakably fragrant. One open
flower can perfume an entire patio. In the evening, the scent becomes
deeper and richer.
But what makes Sambac truly special is its adaptability.
It can grow as a compact patio shrub, a flowering hedge, or a climbing
vine. It performs beautifully in containers. It tolerates both full sun and
partial shade. The more light you give it, the more flowers it rewards you
with.
And unlike many tropicals, Sambac does not bloom just once. With proper
care, it flowers in cycles throughout the warm season.
For gardeners, that combination is rare: beauty, perfume, flexibility,
and repeat bloom.
That is why it has remained one of the most wanted fragrant plants in
cultivation.
You always wanted an avocado tree. Not in Miami - right there in Central
Florida, in your own yard. You planted one, it grew well for a few years,
and it felt like you finally figured it out. Then 2026 hit. A few cold
nights, temperatures dropped below what your area usually sees, and the tree
was gone.
Here is the part most people miss: USDA zones are based on average minimums,
not the worst freezes. One bad night can erase years of growth.
That does not mean avocado will not work. It means you planted the wrong
variety. Cold hardy avocados are built for exactly this kind of
surprise.
USDA zone map
This USDA Zone map makes one thing clear: all of Florida can grow
avocado. The question is not if - it is which variety. From North Florida
(8b) to South Florida (11a), there is always an option that fits your
conditions.
If you are outside Florida - in Texas, Louisiana, California, or anywhere
else - the same rule applies. Start with your USDA zone, then choose the
right type of avocado for it. You can check your local zone here
So what does this mean for your yard? It is not about trying again and
hoping for a warmer winter. It is about choosing a tree that actually
matches your zone.
Cold Hardy Avocado Varieties for Reliable
Harvests
Swipe left/right to see all data <->
🌡️ Threshold
🛡️ Resistance Profile
Primary Varieties & Type
Culinary Profile
📍 Geographic Best Fit
15°F+
High Resistance: Mexican-type selections. Short freezes
near 15°F are
survivable with minor leaf burn.
Microclimate matters more than your zone. The same yard can have warm and
cold pockets. Plant near a south-facing wall, under light
canopy, or in a spot protected from wind, and you gain a few critical
degrees on cold nights.
Young avocado trees need protection during their first winters. They have
not built enough wood or root strength yet, so even a short cold snap can
damage them. Simple steps like frost cloth, wind protection, or temporary
covers can make the difference between a setback and a
loss.
You may see avocados labeled as Type A or Type B. This refers to how the
flowers
open, not cold hardiness. Some people mix both types to improve pollination,
and while a single tree can still produce fruit, having two different types
is beneficial and can increase your harvest.
Practical Planting Advice
Plant on a mound
Raise the root zone 4-8 inches for fast drainage.
Avoid low spots
Standing water is worse than drought for avocados.
Full sun
Maximum light = stronger growth and better recovery.
Use microclimate
South-facing wall, light canopy, or wind protection adds critical
warmth.
Do not overwater
Let the top layer dry slightly between watering.
Protect first winter
Cover young trees during cold nights.
✅ Stop Guessing. Plant What Works.
Cold hardy avocados are not theory - they are proven to handle real
conditions. Choose the right variety for your zone, plant it correctly, and
you stop replacing trees after every cold snap.
Get
10% off when you buy 2 or more 3 gal avocado trees. Mix
varieties, combine Type A and Type B, and set yourself up for better
pollination and bigger harvests.
Offer valid through 04/15/2026. No code needed - discount
applied automatically at checkout.
Discount
applies to 3 gal avocado plants only. Not valid on previous purchases and
cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts. Offer subject to
change without notice.