Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 1 Jan 2026

Why young trees need staking?

Mango trees with bamboo support

Mango trees with bamboo support

Staking young trees

Staking young trees

🌳 Why young trees need staking?



Staking a young tree is simple but important. The goal is to attach a bamboo stake to support the trunk, encourage straight growth, and-most importantly-prevent the stem from wiggling.

Young trees grow fast and vigorously, but their trunks are often much taller and heavier than their root systems can support. At the same time, those trunks are still thin and flexible. Even light wind can cause the tree to rock back and forth. This movement disturbs developing roots and slows establishment.
  • ❗️ Without proper support:


  • 🔹 The trunk can break in strong wind.
  • 🔹 Roots loosen instead of anchoring.
  • 🔹 The trunk may grow crooked.
  • 🔹 The tree becomes uneven and less stable long-term.


🌳 How to stake correctly

  • 🌳 Small trees


  • 🔹 Create an A-frame with one bamboo stake.
  • 🔹 Attach near the top, forming a triangle.
  • 🔹 Do not push the stake right next to the trunk. It may look neat, but it can damage roots and will not provide proper stability.


🌳 Medium trees

  • 🔹 Use 2-3 tie points along the trunk.
  • 🔹 Use soft green garden tape, 1/2"wide.
  • 🔹 Secure firmly but allow slight movement.


🌳 Tall or heavy trees

  • 🔹 Use a strong support such as a metal pipe. We use 1" aluminum electrical conduit.
  • 🔹 Attach with wider green tape, about 1"to protect the bark.
  • 🔹 Build tripods around larger trees.


❗️ Important maintenance tips:

  • 🔸 Check ties and tape often-every few weeks to once a month.
  • 🔸 As the tree grows, re-adjust the tape so it does not cut into the trunk as it thickens and doesn't cause any rot.
  • 🔸 Re-position bamboo stakes as needed, and be ready to replace them with a larger, stronger stake as the tree grows.

These rules apply to both potted trees and trees planted in the ground. Proper staking early on helps your tree establish faster, grow straighter, and develop a strong, stable root system for the future.

📸 Mango trees in 7 gal pots with"nursery-style"bamboo stakes that create a neat"standard". When stepping up or planting in the ground, attach a new stake and keep it away from the trunk.

🛒 Explore fruit trees and flowering trees

#Food_Forest #Trees #How_to

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Date: 4 Jan 2026

Is it Star Apple, Star Fruit, Cainito or Caimito? Are you lost? Here is the truth:

⭐️ Is it Star Apple, Star Fruit, Cainito or Caimito? Are you lost? Here is the truth:





#Food_Forest

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Date: 5 Jan 2026

A  tuxedo  cat  planting  a  small  shrub  in  a  tropical  garden  while  a  ginger
    cat  relaxes  nearby  with  coffee  and  donuts,  illustrating  winter  planting  in 
 a  warm 
 climate.
Sunshine: January might feel warm, but its still winter. Wool socks, scarf, hot coffee.
Smokey: You get warm when you work. Plant now so roots are established before spring growth starts.
Sunshine: Alright. Lets see who stays warmer - you digging or me with coffee.

🌴 Why winter planting works in a warm climate

By our plant expert Tatiana Anderson

We are lucky to live in a warm climate. This is how I think about the seasons here. Winter is for roots. Spring is for growth. Summer is for managing heat and water.

So if we want plants that handle summer better, we plant them in the season that gives them the best start. Winter here is comfortable. The soil stays workable. The days are mild. And plants are not being stressed by heat. That is exactly why winter is the best time to plant in Florida and other warm areas.

If we use this season well, plants go into spring already settled instead of trying to catch up. This is what I like to plant now, and why.

🟢 Trees first. Anything that will be in the ground for years. Fruit trees, shade trees, flowering trees. When we plant them in winter, they can focus on roots before the spring growth surge starts. By the time spring arrives, the tree is anchored and ready to grow on top.
Examples: mango, avocado, Eugenia cherries, jackfruit, sapodilla, longan, lychee, canistel.

🟢 Shrubs next. Shrubs establish faster than trees, but winter still gives them an advantage. They settle in quietly before the spring flush and bloom cycles begin. That usually means steadier growth and fewer problems once heat returns.
Examples: gardenia, jasmine, brunfelsia, hibiscus, clerodendrums.

🟢 Vines are often overlooked. Vines want to grow fast when spring starts. If the root system is not ready, you get weak growth and frustration. Planting vines in winter gives them time to build a foundation first, so spring growth has support.
Examples: Rangoon creeper, stephanotis, Petrea, Mexican Flame Vine.

🛒 Explore cold tolerant plants

Date: 8 Jan 2026

Is winter killing your mango flowers? 33 winter-proof mid-season mango varieties in 90-sec tour

33 winter-proof mid-season mango varieties

❄️ Is winter killing your mango flowers? 33 winter-proof mid-season mango varieties in 90-sec tour

  • 🥭 Mid-season mango varieties make up the heart of the mango harvest. They are not as early as the first winter bloomers and not as late as the extended-season types, but they fill out most of the season.
  • 🥭 Mango trees are winter bloomers, but freezing temperatures can damage them, especially when the trees are still young.
  • 🥭 Right now it is January, and many mid-season mango trees are in bloom or just starting to bloom. While a winter cold snap can damage flowers, mango trees are resilient and often re-bloom once warmer weather returns.
  • 🥭 A list of winter-proof mid-season mango varieties in Top Tropicals garden - Winter 2026



    Blooming time: late December - January, may re-bloom February-March

  • · All Summer
  • · Alphonso
  • · Angie
  • · Baptiste
  • · Carrie
  • · Cogshall
  • · Creme Brulee
  • · Cushman
  • · East Indian
  • · Edward
  • · Florigon
  • · Fralan
  • · Fruit Cocktail
  • · Fruit Punch
  • · Gary
  • · Glenn
  • · Gold Nugget
  • · Harvest Moon
  • · Julie
  • · Juliette
  • · Lemon Zest
  • · Madame Fransis
  • · Maha Chinook
  • · O-15 (OMG)
  • · Pim Seng Mun
  • · Pineapple Pleasure
  • · Rapoza (Dwarf Hawaiian)
  • · Super Julie
  • · Suvarnarekha (Sundari)
  • · Triplesec (Seacrest, 40-36)
  • · Ugly Betty
  • · Venus
  • · Venus
  • · Wise


🛒 Explore Mango varieties

📚 Learn more:


#Food_Forest #Mango #How_to

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Date: 7 Jan 2026

Do you know why its a Papaya time?

Cat James Coconuts with his papayas

Cat James Coconuts with his papayas

🍊 Do you know why it's a Papaya time?



Because Papaya Trees fruit year around! James Coconuts just harvested a big crop from his papaya trees. Varieties in fruit right now, in January: Wan Deng, Lady Red, Waimanalo, Sunrise, TR Hovey.

🛒 Explore Papaya varieties

📚 Learn more:


🟡about #Papaya

🐈📸 Cat James Coconuts with his papayas at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden

#PeopleCats #Papaya

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