Date: 27 Jan 2026
🌸 Adenium, Coffee, and Donuts
Sunshine: So it is a team plant. Everyone blooms, nobody agrees.
Smokey: Yet it grows just fine.
Sunshine: That is the secret. Coffee and donuts.
🌸Featured Adeniums
Recommended by our Horticulturist, Tatiana Anderson
Deep magenta flowers with a velvety look and a darker, almost black edge. A bold, elegant adenium that stands out immediately.
Bright yellow and mauve swirls across layered petals create a warm, cheerful bloom that lives up to its name.
Clean white petals brushed with playful pink streaks. A reliable bloomer
with soft ruffled flowers.
Known for its three-color effect, shifting from yellow to pink to nearly white on the same plant.
Date: 20 Feb 2026
Top Ten Fruit Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
Avocado tree with fruit
Eugenia
Feijoa - Pineapple Guava
Jaboticaba tree
Loquat tree
Macadamia Nut tree
Prunus sp - Peach
Persimmon tree
Pomegranate tree with fruit
Psidium littorale - Cattley Guava tree with fruit
🏆 Top Ten Fruit Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
These fruit trees had no damage after 3 nights of hard freeze (25F) with NO PROTECTION:
- ✔️ Avocado - cold hardy varieties
- ✔️ Eugenias (Grumichama, Rio Grande, Surinam and more)
- ✔️ Feijoa - Pineapple Guava
- ✔️ Jaboticaba
- ✔️ Loquat
- ✔️ Macadamia Nut
- ✔️ Prunus sp - Peaches, Plums, Nectarines
- ✔️ Persimmons
- ✔️ Pomegranate
- ✔️ Psidium littorale - Cattley Guavas
🛒 Explore cold tolerant tropical plants and cold hardy Avocados
- 🎥 What tropical plants survived Florida's historic freeze without protection
- 🎥 These Avocados survived 3 nights of 25F hard freeze, Florida Record Freeze
📚 Learn more:
- · To trim or not to trim? When and how to trim damaged plants after winter
- · Cold-hardy avocado varieties - what freezing they really survive
- · Cold-hardy avocado survival groups - what the numbers really mean
#Discover #How_to #Food_Forest
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Date: 13 Feb 2026
To trim or not to trim? When and how to trim damaged plants after winter
✂️ To trim or not to trim? When and how to trim damaged plants after winter
Florida just went through a record freeze (Feb 2026). Now gardens look rough - brown leaves, blackened tips, mushy stems. The big question: do you cut now or wait?
Here is the simple rule.
✂️ When is the right time to trim?
Do not rush.
Wait until the danger of more freezes has passed and you start seeing new growth. In most of Florida, that means late winter to early spring.
Why wait?
Dead foliage actually protects living tissue underneath. If you cut too early and another cold snap hits, you can cause more damage.
If a plant is completely collapsed and clearly mushy, you can remove that material. But for woody shrubs and trees - patience pays.
✂️ How far should you trim?
Trim back to healthy, green wood. Start by removing:
· Black, mushy, or obviously rotted stems
- · Broken branches
- · Completely dried leaves
Many tropicals look terrible after freeze but recover beautifully in warm weather. Te rule of thumb is: once minimum temperatures stay above 65F for over a week, the active growth starts.
✂️ How to tell if a branch is dead or alive
Use the scratch test. Lightly scrape the bark with your fingernail.
· Green underneath - it is alive
- · Brown and dry - likely dead
Also check flexibility. Live branches bend slightly. Dead ones snap.
✂️ Important - do not give up too soon
This is where many gardeners make a mistake.
After a few weeks - sometimes even months - plants can push new growth through what looks like a dead branch. Buds may appear higher than expected, not just from the roots.
✂️ You may see growth:
- · Along the stem
- · From lower nodes
- · From the trunk
- · From the base
Some plants look gone - then suddenly leaf out again.
✂️ Final thought
After a hard freeze, the best tools are patience and a careful eye.
Wait for warmth. Trim slowly. Check for green. And give your plants time to surprise you.
Tropical gardens are tougher than they look.
🛒 Need to replace a damaged plant? Explore the best options
#Discover #How_to
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Date: 12 Feb 2026
Hoa Mai and the Year of the Horse - why yellow flower Ochna is the luckiest plant of 2026?
Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai - seeds
Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai tree
Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai flowers
🔥 Hoa Mai and the Year of the Horse - why yellow flower Ochna is the luckiest plant of 2026?
Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai has seeds and sepals that resemble the face of Mickey Mouse, hence the common name.
💖 On February 17, 2026, the Lunar New Year begins - welcoming the Year of the Fire Horse
And if there is one plant that perfectly captures the bold, bright energy of a new zodiac cycle, it is Ochna integerrima, known in Vietnam as Hoa Mai. This cheerful yellow bloomer is not just decorative. In Vietnam, it is the flower of Tet - a living symbol of luck, prosperity, and fresh beginnings.
💖 Does Vietnamese New Year start on a different date in 2026?
No. In 2026, Tet - the Vietnamese Lunar New Year - begins on the same day as the Chinese Lunar New Year: February 17. Tet follows the lunar calendar, just like Chinese New Year, so both celebrations align this year.
Tet, officially called Tet Nguyen Dan, marks the arrival of spring and is the most important holiday in Vietnam. And nothing represents Tet in southern Vietnam more than Hoa Mai in full bloom.
💖 Why Hoa Mai is the flower of Tet
Hoa Mai literally means "yellow blossoms". In southern Vietnam, these bright yellow flowers open right around Lunar New Year, often covering the entire plant.
The color yellow symbolizes:
· Wealth
- · Prosperity
- · Happiness
- · Good fortune
Families display flowering Hoa Mai trees in homes, courtyards, and businesses during Tet. The more blossoms, the more luck the coming year is believed to bring.
💖 Why it is called the Mickey Mouse plant
After flowering, Ochna integerrima produces glossy black berries that sit on bright red sepals. The combination looks surprisingly like a tiny cartoon face - two black "ears" and a round head - which is how it earned the nickname Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant.
It is playful, unusual, and a total conversation starter.
💖 A perfect plant for Year of the Fire Horse energy
The Fire Horse year is associated with:
· Passion
- · Independence
- · Bold action
- · Fast movement
If you have been waiting to start something new - planting a rare shrub, reshaping your garden, training a miniature tree - this zodiac cycle carries that "go for it" momentum.
💖 Can you grow Hoa Mai outside Vietnam?
Yes - and that is part of its appeal. Ochna integerrima - Hoa Mai - is:
· A slow-growing, medium shrub
- · Trainable into a small tree or bonsai form
- · Suitable for containers
- · Relatively tolerant of light frost
To encourage winter blooms, steady feeding before and during the cooler season helps stimulate bud formation. Consistent light, good drainage, and balanced fertilization are key.
💖 A living symbol of luck for 2026
Every Lunar New Year carries its own theme. The Year of the Fire Horse is about bold growth, forward motion, and courage.
Hoa Mai blooms exactly at the moment when people reset intentions, clean their homes, and welcome fresh energy. It is not just a plant - it is a seasonal signal that a new chapter has begun.
And if you want to invite a little more golden luck into your garden this February, few plants say "new year, new beginning" better than Hoa Mai in full bloom.
🛒 Plant your own lucky Mickey Mouse Plant
📚 Learn more:
#Horoscope #Hedges_with_benefits #Nature_Wonders #Fun_Facts
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 4 Feb 2026
Top nine plants of love, desire, and the senses: aphrodisiacs and sensory connections
Cinnamon (Cinnamomum zeylanicum)
Coffee - Coffea arabica
Fig tree fruit (Ficus carica)
Patchouli - Pogostemon cablin
Pomegranate (Punica granatum)
Cacao - Chocolate Tree (Theobroma cacao)
💖 Top nine plants of love, desire, and the senses: aphrodisiacs and sensory connections
Across cultures, love has also been expressed through taste, scent, warmth, and shared ritual. These tropical plants were valued not just for beauty, but for how they awaken the body and deepen connection.
💘 1. Cacao
Cacao - Chocolate Tree (Theobroma cacao) - has one of the strongest global associations with love. Revered by the Aztecs as a “food of the gods”, it was consumed to increase desire and emotional bonding. Chocolate contains compounds linked to feelings of pleasure and infatuation, making cacao a natural Valentine symbol.
👉 Chocolate Tree gift
💘 2. Vanilla Orchid
Vanilla (Vanilla planifolia) is both an orchid and one of the most sensual plant aromas known. Historically paired with cacao in love remedies, vanilla represents intimacy, warmth, and attraction. Its fragrance alone carries powerful emotional associations.
👉 Vanilla orchid gift
💘 3. Ginger
Ginger symbolizes heat, vitality, and passion. Used worldwide to stimulate circulation and warm the body, it represents spark, chemistry, and physical energy.
👉 Ginger gift
💘 4. Cinnamon
Cinnamon (Cinnamomum zeylanicum) has long been associated with attraction and stimulation. Its warm, lingering aroma makes it a classic plant of desire, comfort, and emotional warmth.
👉 Cinnamon gift
💘 5. Pomegranate
Pomegranate (Punica granatum) has long symbolized love, fertility, and union, with its many ruby-red seeds representing abundance and deep connection. In ancient traditions, it was linked to goddesses of love and marriage and remains a symbol of passion balanced by continuity and commitment.
👉 Pomegranate gift
💘 6. Coffee
Coffee (Coffea arabica) represents connection through shared ritual. Sacred to African Sufis for its stimulating properties, coffee symbolizes conversation, alertness, and social bonding rather than purely romantic love.
👉 Coffee tree gift
💘 7. Fig Tree
Figs (Ficus carica) have ancient associations with fertility, sensuality, and indulgence. Their voluptuous form, sweet flesh, and rich texture made them symbols of desire and abundance in many cultures.
👉 Fig tree gift
💘 8. Betel Leaf and Betel Nut
Betel Leaf (Piper betle) is a powerful symbol of love, respect, and partnership across South and Southeast Asia. It is exchanged in courtship, weddings, and ceremonies, representing acceptance and shared experience. Its heart-shaped leaves reinforce its Valentine symbolism.
Betel nut (Areca catechu) - traditionally used as a stimulant and aphrodisiac, betel nut represents intensity, ritual, and sensory awakening. In this context, it is best presented as a cultural symbol rather than a casual love plant.
👉 Betel gift
💘 9. Patchouli
Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin) represents deep attraction and emotional grounding. Its earthy, musky scent has long been associated with intimacy and physical presence. Unlike sweet florals, patchouli symbolizes mature, rooted love that lingers.
🛒 Explore gift plants
🎁 Get a Gift Card
📚 Learn more:
- ✦ Valentines day Best Gift Plant Ideas
- ✦ Cacao: fruit of Money and Love
- ✦ How to plant vanilla orchid
- ✦ Most interesting edible gingers
- ✦ Plants of Love: Aphrodisiacs of the plant world
- ✦ How to increase libido?
- ✦ How to Grow Your Own Cinnamon Tree
- ✦ Healing drops of blood: why Pomegranate is a superfood
- ✦ Don't drink your coffee until you see this!
- ✦ The fruit tree that every garden must have: Figs
- ✦ How to grow your own Pepper plants. Five most valuable Pipers
- ✦ How to grow Patchouli indoors
- ✦ Valentine’s plants from around the world that symbolize love, connection, and appreciation
- ✦ Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection
- ✦ Four popular plants of friendship, appreciation, and shared connection
🎥 Secret Sex Life of Vanilla Orchid: how to produce your own vanilla
#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden
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