Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 29 Jun 2026

Which Passion Fruit Vine should you grow - 3 top varieties

Which Passion Fruit Vine should you grow - 3 top varieties

🍊 Which Passion Fruit Vine should you grow - 3 top varieties



There are few plants that reward gardeners as quickly as a Passion Fruit Vine (Passiflora edulis). In just a season or two, a single vine can transform a fence, arbor, or trellis into a lush green wall covered with spectacular flowers, followed by dozens of delicious tropical fruits.
Passion fruit combines beauty and productivity like few other plants. The flowers look almost too exotic to be real, attracting butterflies and pollinators, while the aromatic fruit is perfect for fresh eating, smoothies, desserts, juices, and jams.

3 top varieties of Passion Fruit

🟡 Sweet Sunrise: the sweetest choice


Large golden-yellow fruit with bright orange pulp and a smooth, sweet tropical flavor. Lower acidity makes it especially enjoyable fresh, right out of the shell.
Perfect for: Fresh eating, smoothies, desserts, and juice.

🟣 Possum Purple: the classic purple passion fruit


Medium-sized deep purple fruit with the traditional sweet-tart flavor and intense tropical aroma that passion fruit lovers expect. The most cold hardy variety.
Perfect for: Fresh eating, juices, desserts, jams, and all-around garden performance.

🔴 Panama Red: go big with giant fruit


Produces impressive burgundy-red fruits that are much larger than standard passion fruits. A vigorous vine known for heavy crops and bold tropical flavor.
Perfect for: Gardeners who want oversized fruit and abundant harvests.

🏡 Why gardeners love passion fruit



📌 No matter which variety you choose, all three are vigorous tropical vines that quickly cover fences, pergolas, arches, and trellises with attractive glossy foliage and some of the most unusual flowers in the plant world.
📌 Once established, passion fruit vines can produce generous harvests over a long season. The fragrant orange pulp is packed with sweet-tart tropical flavor and can be eaten fresh, scooped into yogurt, blended into drinks, or used in countless desserts and preserves.
📌 They thrive in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil and regular watering during active growth. In frost-free climates they can fruit for many years, while gardeners in cooler regions often enjoy growing them in large containers that can be protected during winter.

✅ Which one is right for you?



Choose Sweet Sunrise if you love sweeter, less acidic fruit.
Choose Possum Purple if you want the classic passion fruit experience with outstanding balance of sweetness and tang.
Choose Panama Red if your goal is giant, show-stopping fruit and heavy harvests.

Whichever you plant, you'll enjoy one of the fastest-growing and most rewarding edible vines you can add to your garden.

🛒 Plant Passionfruit - fast growing and rewarding

📚 Learn more:

Passion Fruit Plant Facts

Botanical name: Passiflora edulis
Also known as: Passion Fruit, Parcha, Maracuya, Granadilla
USDA Zone: 8 - 11
Highligths Vine or creeper plantFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryBlue, lavender, purple flowersWhite, off-white flowersEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

Passiflora edulis in Plant Encyclopedia
Passion fruit butter glaze: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
The truth about Passion flower and Passion fruit.

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Date: 29 Jun 2026

😾 When Orange Isn't a Good Thing

Smokey,  a  tuxedo  cat  dressed  as  a  rust  detective,  examines  a  plumeria 
 leaf  with  a  magnifying  glass  while  Sunshine,  a  relaxed  orange  tabby,  lounges
    with  a  coffee  mug  inside  a  greenhouse  filled  with  healthy  blooming 
 plumerias.  Outside  the  greenhouse,  rain  falls  on  rust-infected  plumeria 
 leaves,  illustrating  how  wet  foliage  promotes  plumeria 
 rust.
Smokey: Those orange spots are plumeria rust.
Sunshine: Orange is an excellent color.
Smokey: On cats, yes. On plumeria leaves, no.
Sunshine: I represent the good kind of orange.

🌸 Plumeria Rust in Humid Climates:
What Finally Worked for Us

By Tatiana Anderson, Plant Expert, Top Tropicals

Side-by-side  photos  of  healthy  plumeria  plants  with  lush  green  foliage 
 and  no  signs  of  rust,  growing  in  pots  inside  a  greenhouse  and  outdoors  at  a 
 tropical 
 nursery.

Healthy plumerias with clean, vibrant foliage after successful rust management. Good airflow, bright conditions, and effective fungicide treatment help keep plants growing strong through Florida's rainy season.

If you grow plumerias in Florida, you probably know what comes next. Around June, when the rainy season begins and afternoon thunderstorms become part of the daily routine, orange-yellow spots start appearing on the undersides of plumeria leaves. Plumeria rust arrives almost like clockwork. If you have ever tried to fight it, you know how frustrating that battle can be.

Close-up  of  the  underside  of  a  plumeria  leaf  covered  with  bright  orange
    plumeria  rust  spores  during  rainy  weather,  with  a  lush  tropical  garden 
 blurred  in  the 
 background.

Plumeria rust appears as bright orange powdery spores on the underside of leaves. Warm, humid, rainy conditions allow the fungus to spread quickly, making it a common sight in tropical and subtropical gardens.

Let me be clear about something right away: Plumeria rust is rarely fatal to an otherwise healthy plant.

In our experience, we have never lost a healthy plumeria to rust alone. The disease is mostly cosmetic, but it causes significant yellowing, triggers premature leaf drop, and can turn a beautiful specimen into something that looks ragged throughout the best months of the growing season. For a plant grown as much for its attractive foliage as its spectacular flowers, that matters.

At Top Tropicals, we have grown plumerias for many years and have tried most of the approaches gardeners typically recommend: sulfur-based fungicides, neem oil, copper sprays, improving drainage, and removing infected leaves before they hit the ground. Some of those things helped to varying degrees. None of them felt like a real breakthrough until recently.

The Fungicide That Actually Did Something

Comparison  image  showing  healthy  plumeria  leaves  after  treatment  with 
 Southern  Ag  Garden  Friendly  Fungicide,  alongside  an  inset  photo  of  a  leaf 
 covered  with  orange  plumeria  rust  spores  before  treatment.

Real-world results after treating plumeria rust with Southern Ag Garden Friendly Fungicide. The inset shows a leaf heavily infected with orange rust spores before treatment, while the main image shows clean, healthy new foliage after the fungus was brought under control.

A few seasons ago, on the recommendation of another grower, we tried Southern Ag Garden Friendly Fungicide . This biological fungicide contains the beneficial bacterium Bacillus sp, and I want to be careful here: I am not suggesting it is the best product for everyone or that it will produce the same results in every situation. What I can say is that, in our experience, it was the first fungicide that consistently produced visible improvement when applied according to the label directions.

We applied it at the first sign of rust, repeated applications according to the label, and actually saw the progression slow down while new infections became less severe. Whether that was the product, the timing, or some combination of factors, I cannot say with certainty. But after cycling through several options over the years, it was the one that felt like it was doing something real. If you are looking for a starting point, it is worth trying.

But the fungicide wasn't our main discovery. That came this past season, and it changed how we think about this disease.

☔️ What This Season Taught Us About Leaf Wetness

Healthy  plumeria  plants  with  lush,  dry  green  leaves  growing  inside  a 
 greenhouse.  The  foliage  is  clean  and  free  of  rust,  showing  vigorous  new 
 growth  under  bright  filtered  light.

Healthy, dry plumeria foliage is one of the best defenses against plumeria rust. Good airflow, bright light, and keeping leaves dry whenever possible help prevent the fungus from taking hold during the rainy season.

This season we moved our prized container plumerias under a covered growing area with a clear plastic roof and approximately 30 percent shade cloth overhead. The structure provides excellent light, warm temperatures, and very good air circulation while protecting the plants from Florida's frequent summer rains. It is not a climate-controlled greenhouse, but rather a protected outdoor growing area.

Here is the important part: these plants were still irrigated regularly, every two to four days, with overhead watering. The leaves did get wet. But because they were not sitting outside during Florida's daily summer downpours, the foliage dried within a reasonable amount of time instead of remaining wet for hours, which is common after a heavy rain followed by cloudy skies and still air.

The result? Not a single case of rust developed on those plants throughout the season. Considering how consistently plumeria rust appears each summer in our nursery, that result immediately caught our attention. The most significant difference was how long the foliage remained wet after watering or rain. Meanwhile, plumerias growing in the ground nearby, fully exposed to the weather, showed rust infection at the usual time.

💦 Ambient Humidity vs. Standing Water

That observation made us rethink what we believed was driving the disease. We had always assumed Florida's high humidity was the primary factor. Humidity certainly plays a role. But this experience suggested that prolonged leaf wetness may be a much more significant factor than ambient humidity by itself.

There is a real difference between air that feels humid and leaves that stay wet for four, six, or eight hours after a rain. Humid air means the moisture content of the atmosphere is high. Wet leaves means there is standing water on the leaf surface. Both conditions can occur together, but they are not the same thing. A leaf in a humid but breezy location can dry within an hour. A leaf in still, wet conditions after a heavy rain may stay wet most of the day. That difference may be far more important than many gardeners realize.

We are not plant pathologists, and we do not want to overstate what we learned from one growing season. But after many years of growing plumerias in Florida, the results were convincing enough that we now protect our best container specimens from prolonged summer rainfall whenever possible.

👉 What We Recommend

Based on many years of growing plumerias in Florida, here are the practices that have worked best for us:

  • Grow plumerias in full sun whenever conditions allow. Good light means faster drying after rain or irrigation, and plants grown in low light often seem to show rust symptoms more readily.
  • Keep your plumerias well-fed. Healthy, vigorously growing plants recover from stress and disease much better than weak ones. We apply Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer every six months for a steady supply of nutrients, and supplement with Sunshine Boosters Megaflor during the growing season. Because Megaflor is gentle, it can be safely applied with every watering, all year long.
  • During extended rainy periods, consider moving valuable container plants under cover if possible. Even a covered patio can make a difference if it keeps the leaves from remaining wet for most of the day.
  • Provide air circulation. Plants crowded together stay wet longer. Space them properly and position them where they receive good airflow.
  • Remove infected fallen leaves. They can continue serving as a source of spores. Pick them up and dispose of them rather than leaving them beneath the plants.
  • If rust begins to appear, start fungicide applications early. Slowing an infection at the beginning is much easier than trying to control one that is already well established.

💡 A Realistic Conclusion

Five  healthy  potted  plumeria  varieties  displaying  white,  pink,  yellow, 
 magenta,  and  multicolored  blooms,  arranged  in  a  row  with  lush  green  foliage 
 and  clean,  rust-free 
 leaves.

A parade of healthy plumerias in full color. Clean foliage, bright blooms, and vigorous growth show what plumerias can look like when rust is kept under control, letting each variety shine in its own unique colors.

Plumeria rust is mostly a cosmetic problem rather than a life-threatening one. Healthy plants usually recover well, but yellowing foliage and premature leaf drop can take much of the beauty out of an otherwise beautiful blooming season.

We cannot promise these methods will eliminate rust in every garden. Every growing environment is different. However, after years of battling this disease, reducing how long the leaves remain wet made a bigger difference than any other single change we have tried. If you grow plumerias in a humid climate and continue struggling with rust, it may be worth focusing not only on humidity itself, but also on how quickly the foliage dries after the rain stops.

📚 Plumerias in Top Tropicals Garden Blog

👉 Start your Plumeria collection

Plumeria Special
Buy 2 or More Plumerias, Save 25%
Mix and match your favorite varieties! Purchase 2 or more plumerias and receive 25% off all plumerias in your order. No coupon code required. Discount is applied automatically when qualifying items are added to your cart.
Valid through July 3, 2026
Offer applies to new orders only. Not valid on previous purchases, pending orders, gift certificates, shipping charges, or combined with other discounts or promotional offers.

Collage  of  sixteen  plumeria  varieties  showcasing  an  extraordinary  range
    of  flower  colors,  including  white,  yellow,  pink,  red,  orange,  multicolored,
    and  variegated  foliage,  highlighting  the  remarkable  diversity  of  plumeria 
 blooms.

Plumerias come in an amazing spectrum of colors and forms. From pure white and buttery yellow to fiery reds, soft pinks, rainbow blends, and even variegated foliage, there is a plumeria to match every tropical garden and collector's taste.

Sunshine: Healthy plumerias need sunshine... that's me... good airflow, and dry leaves.
Smokey: That's a surprisingly accurate summary.
Sunshine:We can help with all of that. Donut worry. Coffee first.

Date: 28 Jun 2026

Do you have an orange cat too?

Do you have an orange cat too?

😼 Do you have an orange cat too?



"Never underestimate someone with an orange head. They're either full of sunshine, or full of bad ideas."

🐈📸 Orange cats Jacques and Jim II at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

#PeopleCats #Quotes

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Date: 28 Jun 2026

Do you have an orange cat too?

Jacques and Jim II - rescued orange cats of TopTropicals

Jacques and Jim II - rescued orange cats of TopTropicals

😼 Do you have an orange cat too?



"Never underestimate someone with an orange head. They're either full of sunshine, or full of bad ideas."

🐈📸 Jacques and Jim II are rescued orange cats living at the TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

#PeopleCats #Quotes

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Date: 28 Jun 2026

Which Pomegranate Is Right for You - Top 5 Amazing Varieties

Which Pomegranate Is Right for You - Top 5 Amazing Varieties Which Pomegranate Is Right for You - Top 5 Amazing Varieties

🍎 Which Pomegranate Is Right for You - Top 5 Amazing Varieties



Pomegranate trees (Punica granatum) deserve a place in almost every garden. They are among the easiest fruit trees to grow, rewarding you with months of brilliant orange-red flowers followed by jewel-like fruit packed with sweet, refreshing arils. Beautiful enough to use as an ornamental and productive enough to fill your kitchen with fresh fruit, they have been cultivated for thousands of years and are still one of the healthiest fruits you can grow.
Which variety should you choose? They all produce delicious fruit, but each has its own personality.

  • ❣️ Angel Red: the biggest fruit and the juicing champion
    Large fruit with tender, edible seeds and exceptionally juicy ruby-red arils. Ripens earlier than Wonderful and is one of the best varieties for fresh juice.
  • ❣️ Eversweet: sweet before it's even ripe
    A unique variety with clear, non-staining juice and very soft seeds. Even slightly immature fruit is sweet, making it an excellent choice for cooler climates.


❣️ Eves: did Eve eat an apple, or was it a pomegranate? Rich flavor for fresh eating
Very large fruit with deep red arils and an outstanding sweet, cherry-like flavor. A favorite for eating fresh right off the tree.

❣️ Vietnam: evergreen and everbearing tropical producer


An evergreen, everbearing variety that flowers and fruits repeatedly in warm climates. Produces very large fruit with soft seeds and long harvest seasons.

❣️ Wonderful: the world's most famous classic favorite
The world's best-known pomegranate and the leading commercial variety. Famous for its rich, sweet-tart, wine-like flavor and outstanding juice quality.

🏡 Easy to grow, hard to beat



No matter which variety you choose, pomegranates are remarkably easy to grow.
· They are self-fertile, highly productive, drought tolerant once established, and thrive in full sun.
· They tolerate poor soils, salt, and heat, are cold hardy to about 15F, and grow beautifully as shrubs, small trees, or large container plants.
· Their long blooming season attracts pollinators, while the colorful fruit adds beauty to the landscape for months.

✨ A fruit treasured for thousands of years



According to Asian legend, the pomegranate was the "Tree of Life" in the Garden of Eden. Some historians even believe the famous forbidden fruit may have been a pomegranate rather than an apple.

The ruby-red arils have been treasured since ancient times, and an old Hindi saying reminds us: "One pomegranate can serve one hundred sick people." Rich in antioxidants, vitamins, and beneficial plant compounds, pomegranates remain one of the healthiest and most rewarding fruits you can grow in your own backyard.

🛒 Ready to grow One... or five?

📚 Learn more:

Pomegranate Plant Facts

Botanical name: Punica granatum
Also known as: Pomegranate, Granada, Grenade, Pomegranate, Granada, Anar, Granaatappel, Pomo Granato, Romeira, Melo Grano
USDA Zone: 8 - 11
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryRed, crimson, vinous flowersThorny or spinyEdible plantDeciduous plantEthnomedical 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.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region

Punica granatum in Plant Encyclopedia
Healing drops of blood: why Pomegranate is a superfood
15 "Bulletproof" Fruit Trees for Tough Ground
Skip the lemon - 5 better fruits for a cough
Top Ten Fruit Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
Top nine plants of love, desire, and the senses: aphrodisiacs and sensory connections
Why you should grow your own Pomegranate Tree

#Food_Forest #Discover

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