Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

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 - seeds

Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai tree

Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai tree

Ochna integerrima - Vietnamese Mickey Mouse plant, Hoa Mai flowers

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.

Vietnamese Mickey Mouse Plant Facts

Botanical name: Ochna integerrima, Ochna thomasiana
Also known as: Vietnamese Mickey Mouse Plant, Hoa Mai, Mai Vang, Hoang Mai
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryYellow, orange flowersWhite, off-white flowersPlant 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.Fragrant plant
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💖 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
And honestly? A plant that explodes into golden blooms in the middle of winter feels exactly right for that kind of year!
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
It blooms in winter, when many tropical collections feel quiet. That alone makes it valuable in warm-climate gardens like Florida.

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:


Ochna integerrima in Plant Encyclopedia
What is Mickey Mouse Plant?
2026: Year of the Fire Horse - time to grow bold, live free, and plant lucky
Year of the Fire Horse - what should you grow in 2026?
More #Horoscope info for plants and cats

#Horoscope #Hedges_with_benefits #Nature_Wonders #Fun_Facts

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Date: 23 Sep 2020

Fast-fruiting trees?

Photo above: Annona reticulata - Red Custard Apple

Q: More of a question than a review, but a review regarding your catalog, it would be easier for us buyers, if we could search for plants that produce fruit in 2 years or less, I don't have the patience to wait longer than that for fruit. I'm trying to buy for a fairly good sized garden but want some fast growers and fruit produced in 2 yrs. Can you help me out?

A: Fruiting time depends on many factors (established size, growing conditions, fertilizing, and even specific variety), this is why we can not just put a simple icon "will fruit within 2 years".
However, most grafted and air-layered fruit trees, including all Mango, Avocado, Loquat, Sapote, Sapodilla, Lychee/Longan, Peaches and Nectarines - will fruit right away. If you see in our store "grafted" or "air-layered" in plant description - these trees will fruit soon. Some of them already flowering and fruiting.
Some non-grafted trees or seedlings like Annona, Artocarpus (Jackfruit), Eugenia, Guava, Banana, Dragon fruit, Mulberry, Blackberry/Raspberry - will fruit within 3-4 years from seed or even sooner (Banana, Mulberry, Dragon fruit, Blackberry-Raspberry - within a year). Usually it says in description that this plant can produce fruit soon.
Bigger size plants are more established and have more energy to produce, so try to get larger size plants if your budget permits, and especially if you can pick up bigger plants rather than shipping them - obviously, shipping has size limitations.
In addition, all spice trees like Bay Leaf, Bay Rum, Allspice and many more - they will produce spice for you right away, so you don't need to wait at all!
If you have questions about fruiting time on any specific plant you put your eye on, don't hesitate to ask!

Photo above: Pimenta dioica - Allspice

Date: 24 Jun 2018

TopTropicals

URBAN TROPICAL GARDENING:
10 secrets of successful Container Mango growing on a balcony.

Q: I live in Miami in apartment on a second floor, and I have a balcony with SE exposure. I wonder if I can grow a mango tree in a pot? Will it fruit for me? I recently moved to South Florida and I don't know much about tropical plants; but I tasted real fiberless mangos from someone's garden - it was so delicious and different from those in the grocery store. I wonder if I can have a fruiting tree on my balcony? And if yes, how do I plant and take care of it?

A: Yes, you can! Here is what you need to do:
1) Temperature. You are lucky to live in Tropics, keep it on a balcony year round.
2) Light. Position the pot in a spot with the most sun exposure. Mango trees can take filtered light too, but the less sun, the less fruit you will get.
3) Soil and Container. Use only well drained potting mix. Step up the purchased plant into next size container (3 gal into 7 gal, 7 gal into 15 gal). When transplanting, make sure to keep growth point (where roots meet the trunk) just at the top of the soil. Covering base of the trunk with soil may kill the plant.
4) Water. Water daily during hot season, but only if top of soil gets dry. If it still moist, skip that day. Mangoes (unlike Avocados!) prefer to stay on a dry side.
5) Fertilizer. Use balanced fertilizer once a month, 1 tsp per 1 gal of soil. Do not fertilize during fruiting - this may cause fruit cracks.
6) Microelements. Apply SUNSHINE-Superfood once a month. This will help your mango healthy, vigorous, and resistant to diseases. Use SUNSHINE-Honey to make your fruit sweeter.
7) Insect control. Watch for scales and mealybugs, clean with solution of soapy water + vegetable oil (may need to repeat 2-3 times with 10 days interval), or with systemic insecticide like imidacloprid only as needed (if non-harsh treatment didn't help). Most Flea shampoo for dogs contain that chemical, you may try that shampoo solution.
8) Trimming. Once potted, do not remove leaves that are discolored or have spots until new growth appears. Dark dots on mango leaves, especially in humid climate like Florida, may be signs of fungus. Treat with fungicide according to label, and remove only badly damaged leaves. Trim crown as needed after flowering and fruiting (by Fall). Train into a small tree, and you may remove some lower branches eventually.
9) Flower and fruit. Mangoes are winter bloomers with bunches of tiny flowers coming in thousands. Many of them set fruit (if pollinating insects present). Keep in mind that young trees can only bare a few fruit. Normally a tree will drop excessive fruit and keep only a few that it can manage. To save the young tree some energy, remove fruit if too many and leave only 2-3 for the first year. It will pay you next year with more abundant crop.
10) Variety. Last but not least: Choose the right variety for container culture! Pick from "condo" dwarf varieties such as Icecream, Nam Doc Mai, Carrie, Cogshall, Julie, Fairchild, Pickering, Graham, Mallika, and a few others - check out Mango Chart pdf and full list of our Mango varieties.

Date: 24 Jun 2018

Our honest advise on Holiday Gift Plants

Q: Any suggestions on gift plants? With Holidays around the corner, I've been thinking of getting a present for my grandma, she lives in FL and is an experienced gardener. I also have a friend that lives in CA, also warm climate, but she doesn't have a green thumb. Any "easy" plants I can try for her?

A: Live plant is a perfect gift, as we all know. However when ordering a plant online as a present, for a happy experience, you should have three things to consider:
1) Gardener's experience. Planting instructions are included with every order, and usually success is there if you follow them. But all plants go through shipping stress (some more, others less) and need time, patience and love to recover. Also, a plant will need a new home after shipping: a pot and a good soil mix. It would be wise if you add potting mix with a gift order; the plant should be planted in a permanent pot as soon as possible, but normally can wait a day in a packing bag until its new owner gets a pot, if it is not ready yet.
2) How easy the plant is? If buying a plant for a beginner, chose something easy, as well as showy. Adeniums - Desert Roses, Jasmines, Clerodendrums, Cordylines are always a good choice. Calatheas, Gingers and Heliconias are always showy, even when not in bloom. Spice trees and herbs are fun, easy to grow and one can enjoy their aroma right away without waiting on them growing bigger. Miracle Fruit is an awesome present, it comes with detailed instructions how to grow the Miracle!
3) How easy the plant ships? Some plants can be easy in cultivation, but they don't take shipping well. After being in a dark box for a few days, most plants usually recover well in experienced hands. When making a present, you want something showy, not just a stick to arrive. Besides Adeniums and Jasmines, many fruit trees usually take shipping without a problem - such as Mango or Sapote trees. You may not want to start with Avocado, Papaya, Carambola, or Cacao - unless they go to an experienced grower - these may take some time and skill to etanblish. Fig trees are super easy in shipping, but figs may drop leaves in Winter - for this same reason, you may think twice about deciduous plants like Sugar Apples, Grapes, Mulberries or Persimmons to be sent as gifts. On the other hand, if you are sending a deciduous tree to a gardener who can appreciate the variety, this may be a good choice - dormant plants take shipping with less stress!

Holiday special: On the picture: Adenium Xmas Santa. A Holiday Special Desert Rose with Christmas-colored flowers - deep-red and white.

Still not sure which plant to choose? You may buy a Top Tropicals Gift Certificate, it ships well and has no expiration date!

Date: 10 Apr 2016

Growing by the sea

Q: Please recommend me some interesting plants that can grow on my waterfront property and can withstand some salt wind. All my neighbors have Sea Grape trees and bougainvilleas, and I want something different and special. I would love to have some colorful or fragrant flowers, or fruit around my paradise home.

Q: Considering your neighbors successfully grow Sea Grape (Coccoloba), and Bougainvilleas, you have a mild, frost free climate. There is a number of spectacular and useful tropical plants that are salt tolerant. Orchid Trees - Bauhinias, Poincettia - Delonix, and Geiger trees - Cordias, are very showy flowering trees. For large size bushes, try Dwarf Poincianas - Caesalpinias, and Scarlet-Coral Erythrinas. Frangipani - Plumeria, come in different colors and bring you perfume fragrance from Hawaii. And of course, Desert Roses - Adeniums, can be grown and showy specimens anywhere in your yard, both in the ground or as potted bonsai.

Most palms, especially popular Coconut Palm, source of tasty fruit and drink, are highly tolerant to salt breeze. If you are looking for something that nobody has, Lipstick palm, or Sealing wax palm - Cyrtostachys lakka, is definitely the most spectacular palm you can find. It is a stunning feather palm that develops a brilliantly red trunk. Palm is originally from Malaysia, but has been introduced to Costa Rica and other tropical areas of the world. Sealing Wax Palm seeds are very slow to germinate, up to a year, and large specimens are very rare and hard to find even in rare tropical plant nurseries. This palm will require a good overhead light, and constant warmth (above temperature 55F). It is definitely worth an effort to grow this beauty.

You may add more tropical accents to your landscape by the sea with many varieties of showy heliconias.

See full list of salt tolerant trees.