🟢Blend ripe avocado with cocoa powder, honey, and a splash of vanilla. 🟢Chill and serve like chocolate pudding. 🟢Nobody will guess the secret ingredient! 🟢Healthy and tasty!
Most tropical flowers bring in pollinators, and bees are usually first in line. But what if you’d rather avoid them? Maybe you’re allergic, or just don’t want bees buzzing around. Good news: some flowers attract butterflies, hummingbirds, moths, or even flies - but not bees.
👉 Quick rules:
✔️ Night-blooming + strong fragrance = moths or bats, not bees. ✔️ Red tubular flowers with little scent = hummingbirds or butterflies, not bees. ✔️ Rotten or fermented smell = flies, not bees. ✔️ Carnivorous plants = trap insects, no bee nectar.
1.
Night-blooming, fragrant - moth and bat flowers
Bees forage by day, so many night-fragrant flowers skip them.
Brugmansia - Angel’s Trumpet - big, hanging blooms, moth and bat pollinated. Cestrum nocturnum - Night-blooming Jasmine - powerful night scent, moths only. Hylocereus Dragon Fruit - huge cactus flowers, bats and moths. Brunfelsia - Lady of the Night - sweet fragrance at dusk, no bee interest.
2.
Hummingbird and butterfly flowers
Bees don’t see red well. Tubular reds, oranges, and yellows usually go to birds and butterflies.
Some flowers smell bad to us but irresistible to flies.
Amorphophallus (Voodoo Lily) - rotting meat scent. Tacca (Bat Head Lily) - spooky black flowers, fly-pollinated. Stapelia (Carrion Flower) - also fly-pollinated. Aristolochia (Pelican Flower) - giant, bizarre fly-traps.
4.
🌸 Specialized orchids
Not all orchids rely on bees. Many use moths, butterflies, or beetles instead.
Vanilla orchid - its natural bee pollinator is absent in most regions, so no bee appeal elsewhere. Brassavola nodosa and others - open at night for moths, not bees.
5.
🕷 Bonus: carnivorous curiosities
Carnivorous plants don’t offer nectar. They trap insects instead, so bees stay away.
Nepenthes (Pitcher Plant) - uses pitchers of liquid to lure and digest insects.
These flowers keep the beauty, fragrance, and wildlife appeal - but without making your garden a bee hotspot.
Photo above: Christmas time in Ukraine (left) and Florida (right)
Q: Are there any tropical plants that will do well if I order them in Winter?
We just bought a house in New Jersey with a large sunroom, and I can't wait to
fill it with tropical beauties! Should I wait until Spring, or do you have something for a Winter start?
A: This is indeed a very good question, as many tropical plant collectors grow their treasures
outside the tropics. The short answer is - yes! You can start filling your tropical sunroom any time of the year, but some plants
are easier to deal with in Winter than others. Below are some guidelines.
6. Winter plant care. During Winter the daylight is shorter and temperatures are
cooler.
- Reduce watering
- Use only liquid amino-acid based fertilizer Sunshine Boosters (safe to use year around)
- Monitor insects.
7. Shipping in Winter. We ship year around. However, if it gets
below freezing in your area, you may use FedEx Hold location, they are temperature controlled so you don't have
to worry about a box being dropped off at your cold porch outside.
8. A note for mild climate residents. Most tropical plants can be
planted in the ground year around. Some ultra-tropical tender species such
Chocolate tree, Ylang Ylang, or small size Mango trees can be grown in pots until Spring and planted out once
chances of cold spell are gone. Until then, they can be moved indoors for cold
nights.
Think outside the box and bring tropical paradise indoors during the
time when we need warmth the most! Tropical plants will brighten your short winter days and help you to have truly HAPPY HOLIDAYS!
Winter bloomers today, left to right: Gloxinia,
Barleria, and ever-bright Crotons...
Date: 14 Nov 2018
Plant Horoscope. Scorpio Zodiac lucky plants: Plants with thorns, red in color, and grow under adversity
Scorpio - 10/23-11/21. A WATER sign ruled by both Mars and Pluto.
Scorpio's plants are often found in remote places or on poor ground.
They will likely have thorns, can be red in color, and grow under adversity.
The good news is, most of these plants are nearly indestructible! This makes
them desirable for every gardener.
The reproductive organs are ruled by Scorpio, so these are plants that
balance the hormones, regulate the menstrual cycle, help with childbirth and
pregnancy. Until this century, Scorpio was ruled by Mars, and the herbs
associated with it had to do with the urogenital system and the colon. Many of the
herbs related to Scorpio are cleansing and revitalizing. Now, astrologers
assign Scorpio to Pluto, discovered in 1930 (Pluto is said by astrologers to be a higher octave of Mars). Physiologically, Scorpio involves the processes of catabolism and anabolism, the death and regeneration
of body cells. Diseases of Scorpio are often involved with the slow buildup of
toxic substances in the body (carcinogens, etc) or in the mind (anger,
jealousy). Scorpio loves a spice with depth and complexity. Camphor Basil adds
rich flavor to every dish it seasons, and its own aphrodisiac tendencies appeal to
Scorpio's lusty nature.
Scorpio
- 10/23-11/21. A WATER sign ruled by both Mars and
Pluto. Scorpio's plants are often found in
remote places or on poor ground. They will likely have
thorns, can be red in color, and grow under adversity. The
good news is, most of these plants are nearly
indestructible! This makes them desirable for every
gardener.