Happy 4th of July from the tropics! Whether you're staying local or
escaping for the long weekend, it's the perfect time to enjoy your garden, start
something new, or grab that plant you've been eyeing. Red Desert Roses, white fragrant Gardenias and
Jasmines, rare Blue
Ginger - tropical blooms are showing off right now, and we are
celebrating with a hot summer sale: 20% off everything with code HAPPY4TH25,
plus extra savings on combined DEALS and
BOGO! Add some color to your summer and let your garden do the
fireworks!
Use the code below to save 20% on your entire
order:
In the photo above: Bauhinia madagascariensis, Red Butterfly Orchid Tree - dazzles with
bright red flowers striped in gold. A rare, fast-growing tropical that brings
serious color to your garden, it is one of the most striking Orchid trees you
can grow. It thrives in sun and rewards with nonstop color.
Date: 22 Apr 2026
When Mango Ripens on the Tree, Everything Changes
Sunshine: Never understood the passion for mango. I tried
store mangoes. I really tried. Just disappointment. So this is what real
mango is supposed to taste like?
Smokey: Now you know.
There is a moment when a mango is perfectly ripe — soft to the touch,
warm from the sun, fragrant before you even cut it open. The skin gives way,
and suddenly there is color, juice, and a sweetness that feels almost
unreal. Not sugary, but deep and layered, like something that took its time
to
become what it is. In that moment, it feels less like fruit and more like
something truly given, exactly as it should be.
What you find in most supermarkets is something else entirely. Picked early
so it can survive shipping, it never gets the chance to finish ripening
process. It softens, it turns yellow, but the depth never comes. The flavor
stays
thin, and the texture often turns fibrous — strings in the flesh that
get stuck in your teeth instead of melting away. That fiber is not an
accident. It helps the fruit stay firm enough to handle transport without
damage. It
looks like a mango, but it never becomes one.
The only way to close that gap is simple — let the fruit ripe where
it belongs. On the tree. When you grow your own mango, you control that
moment. You pick it when it is actually ready, not when it has to survive a
truck
ride across the country. And that one difference is everything you taste.
Scoring a mango cheek into cubes - the easiest way to prepare clean,
ready-to-eat pieces.
Quick beginner guide to growing mango trees - from choosing the right
variety to pruning, watering, and container growing tips.
Date: 13 Apr 2026
🏖️ Aloha, Backyard Edition
🌈
Sunshine: Look what I can do. It all started with
plumerias. Aloha, backyard edition.
Smokey: You are not just planting a tree - you are building
a tropical island lifestyle around it. Not bad for
staying home.
It usually starts simple. A plumeria in a pot by the patio. The flowers
catch your eye first, then the scent follows you,
soft but unmistakable. And that scent does something strange - it brings
back places you have been, or places you wish you had. Warm evenings, ocean
air,
tropical vacations that stay with you long after they are over.
That is the part people do not expect. One plant changes how the space
feels. But
adding a few changes everything. Different colors, slightly different
fragrances, layers that build on each other. It stops being a plant and
becomes an atmosphere that
pulls you outside without thinking.
Plumeria carries that tropical world with it. The same feeling people travel
for can live
right outside your door. Mix a few varieties, and your backyard starts
feeling like a place you never want to leave.
Plumerias are one of those plants you don't just grow
- you start collecting. One turns into two, then five, then suddenly you
want them
all!
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.”
Large Grafted Mango Trees - Plant Now Before
Winter!
"Next Time We'll Specify - A TREE!" - Smokey and
Sunshine Plant a Giant Mango
🌡️ Why plant now?
Fall is the perfect time to plant tropical fruit trees. The
soil is still warm, the air is mild, and your trees can quietly build strong
roots. By spring, they’ll already be settled and ready to grow
fast.
Imagine walking outside next summer and picking your own
mangoes from a tree you planted this fall!