Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 3 May 2026

3 Olive Trees Worth Planting in Your Yard Right Now

3 Olive Trees Worth Planting in Your Yard Right Now

3 Olive Trees Worth Planting in Your Yard Right Now



Olive trees aren’t just for the Mediterranean anymore. In warm parts of the U.S. - including much of Florida - certain varieties handle heat, humidity, and even occasional cold better than people expect. If you’ve been thinking about adding something useful, low-maintenance, and long-lived to your garden, olives deserve a spot on your list. Here are three varieties that actually make sense to grow.

  • 1. Arbequina: Compact, Productive, and Beginner-Friendly


Arbequina is one of the easiest olives to grow, especially if space is limited. It is naturally compact, which makes it great for containers or small yards. It starts producing early compared to other olives, handles heat well, and adapts to different soils. The fruit is mild, buttery, and excellent for oil. If you want an olive tree that behaves well and produces without much fuss, this is the one. 👉 More...

  • 2. Coratina: Bold Flavor and Strong Growth


Coratina is a completely different type of olive - vigorous, tough, and known for intense flavor. It is fast-growing and very hardy once established, and it produces heavily under the right conditions. The fruit is high in oil content with a flavor that is strong and peppery, making it prized for premium olive oil. This is a great choice if you want a more traditional, high-performance olive tree with character. 👉 More...

  • 3. Leccino: Reliable and Cold-Tolerant


Leccino is known for consistency and is one of the most widely planted olives for a reason. It is more cold-tolerant than many other varieties and is a reliable producer year after year. It has a medium growth habit that is easy to manage, and the fruit works well for both oil and curing. If your area gets occasional cold snaps, Leccino is a safer bet. 👉 More...

  • Why olives make sense in your garden


Olives check a lot of boxes most fruit trees don’t. They are drought-tolerant once established and don’t need rich soil; average or even poor soil is fine. They are long-lived trees that can produce for decades and have low pest pressure compared to many tropical fruits. They’re not high-maintenance, and they don’t demand constant attention.

What to know before you plant



A few practical points make all the difference. Full sun is non-negotiable, and drainage matters because if water sits, the roots suffer. Light pruning keeps trees productive and manageable. Some varieties produce better with cross-pollination. In Florida conditions, airflow and avoiding overly wet soil are key.

If you want a tree that looks good, produces something useful, and doesn’t need babysitting, olives are hard to beat. Choose Arbequina for small spaces and ease, Coratina for strong growth and bold oil, or Leccino for reliability and cold tolerance. Plant one - or plant all three - and you’ll start to see why olive trees have been grown for thousands of years.

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Olea europea
Olive
USDA Zone: 9-11
Plant used for bonsaiSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunDry conditionsModerate waterEdible plantPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsEthnomedical plant.
Plants marked as ethnomedical and/or described as medicinal, are not offered as medicine but rather as ornamentals or plant collectibles.
Ethnomedical statements / products have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. We urge all customers to consult a physician before using any supplements, herbals or medicines advertised here or elsewhere.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time


🛒 Shop Olive trees

#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover

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Date: 3 May 2026

Mango Rainbow: a miniature Angie

Mango Rainbow: a miniature Angie
Mango Rainbow: a miniature Angie 🌈

  • 🥭 Angie mango is a South Florida selection named after Angie Whitman, wife of the legendary mango collector Bill Whitman and a trustee of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.

  • 🥭 It is prized for its rich, complex flavor in the Alphonso class, with deep sweetness and layered apricot notes. The fruit is oblong, about 1 lb on average, with smooth yellow to orange skin and an Indian-orange blush on sun-exposed shoulders. The flesh is deep tangerine orange, fiberless, and intensely flavorful.

  • 🥭 Trees are semi-dwarf, good as Condo Mango, highly manageable with pruning, and known for excellent disease resistance. Its early season is another major advantage in South Florida, often allowing fruit to mature before the heavy summer rains. More 👉


🛒 Shop Mango varieties

📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Mango #Mango_Rainbow

Plant Facts

Mangifera indica
Mango
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large tree taller than 20 ftSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterYellow, orange flowersPink flowersEdible plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant
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Date: 2 May 2026

What makes Sunshine Boosters different

What makes Sunshine Boosters different

What makes Sunshine Boosters different



If your plants look stressed, slow, or inconsistent, the issue might not be your care - it might be how you’re feeding them. Most fertilizers are harder to use than they should be. Once you understand why, everything starts to make sense.

  • ☘️ Why fertilizers are so confusing?


If you’ve ever stood in front of a shelf full of fertilizers thinking "what do I even pick?" - you’re not alone.
Most feeding programs are a mess. Different brands, different formulas, different schedules. One for growth, one for bloom, one for micros, one more "just in case".
And somehow it still feels like guesswork.
Easy to overfeed. Easy to underfeed. Easy to waste money.
That’s exactly the problem Sunshine Boosters were built to solve.
The formulas are balanced and mild, so you can use them regularly without stressing about mistakes.
Now here’s where it gets interesting.

  • ☘️ The problem with traditional fertilizers


Most traditional fertilizers weren’t made for how we actually grow plants today. Dry fertilizers are built for large field use. They often carry excess salts and don’t work well in containers or soilless mixes. Many don’t even include enough trace elements.
And over time, they can build up in the soil.
Sunshine Boosters works differently.

  • ☘️ Why liquid feeding wins


First - it’s liquid.
Plants don’t eat nutrients, they drink them. Liquid feeding means nutrients are available right away. Every watering becomes feeding. No waiting, no uneven supply.

  • ☘️ Amino-acid chelation - the real difference


Second - the way nutrients are delivered is completely different.
Most fertilizers use synthetic chelators like EDTA. They keep nutrients stable, but plants have to spend energy to use them.
Sunshine Boosters use amino-acid chelation instead.
That means nutrients come in a form plants already recognize and use naturally. Less effort for the plant, more energy for growth, flowers, and fruit.
And there’s no salt buildup over time.

  • ☘️ Low salt index - better water uptake


Speaking of salts - this is a big one.
High salt levels in fertilizers actually make it harder for plants to absorb water. That’s why plants can look stressed even when the soil is wet.
Sunshine Boosters has a low salt index.
Less resistance, better water flow into the roots, better hydration, stronger plants.

  • ☘️ Faster growth without the risk


Put it all together and you get faster growth, stronger structure, more flowers and fruit - without the usual risk of burning or overdoing it.
Because the nutrient levels are balanced and not overly concentrated, they do not affect the natural taste of fruits and edibles.
The products are also safe for regular use and friendly to pollinating insects, which is important for fruit production.

☘️ Feeding made simple



And the best part?
It’s simple.
Mix Sunshine Boosters with water. Use it when you water. That’s it.

  • 👉 Stay with us - next we’ll break down how different formulas match different plant needs, so you can get even better results. 👉 More...


🛒
Get your plants real food

📚
Learn more:
📱 What are Sunshine Boosters

#Discover #Fertilizers #How_to
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Date: 2 May 2026

Roasted figs with balsamic: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Roasted figs with balsamic: quick-n-fun exotic recipes Roasted figs with balsamic: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

🍴 Roasted figs with balsamic: quick-n-fun exotic recipes


  • 🟡Slice ripe figs in half and place them cut-side up on a baking tray.
  • 🟡Roast until they soften and start to caramelize at the edges.
  • 🟡Drizzle with a little balsamic reduction while still warm, letting it soak into the fruit.
  • 🟡Serve right away - sweet, tangy, and rich with that deep roasted flavor.


🌿 About the plant:


Figs are ancient fruit trees producing soft, honeyed fruit with edible seeds inside.

🏡 In the garden:


Many varieties grow well in warm climates and even containers. Prefer sun and good drainage.

🛒 Plant a hardy fig tree

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Ficus carica
Fig Tree, Brevo
USDA Zone: 9-11
Plant used for bonsaiSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterOrnamental foliageEdible plantDeciduous plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeFlood tolerant plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Date: 1 May 2026

Dont eat the evidence

Dont eat the evidence
🌭 Don't eat the evidence 🐶

Loki:
"Alright - one last chance, Draco:
Who ate that sausage? Before I start talking."


🐈📸 Lab dog Draco and Cat Loki at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

#PeopleCats

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