Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 4 May 2026

🎉 Work First. Celebrate Anyway. That Is the Plan.

Sunshine  cat  holding  large  mango  tacos  in  a  garden  nursery  while  Smokey
    works  on  laptop  with  margarita  and  donuts  on 
 table
Smokey: Work first. Celebrations later.
Sunshine: I am celebrating efficient workflow.
Smokey: Impressive. Somehow your workflow smells like tacos.
Sunshine: I assembled mango tacos. Join my festivities.

Cinco de Mayo has a way of sneaking up the right way. The weather settles, the evenings stretch a little longer, and suddenly everything moves outside - plants, people, and whatever happens to be for lunch. It is the kind of day where you stay out longer than planned, something cold is sweating on the table, and dinner becomes whatever sounds good.

This year, it was mango tacos. Not a recipe we planned - just a few ripe mangoes that needed a purpose and the kind of lazy inspiration that shows up around 5pm in the garden. Nothing complicated. Just something warm from the pan and a quick assembly that somehow feels like a celebration.

It's funny how a good meal can send you down a rabbit hole. One bite of something fresh and you start wondering where it came from, whether you could grow it yourself, and how much better it might taste if you did.

That is really the point. A small shift from planning to picking, where the line between the garden and the kitchen starts to blur. If you are growing fruit, or thinking about it, this is your reminder: the best meals usually start about ten feet from your back door.

🛒 Start with one plant - Shop Fruit Trees

Date: 25 Feb 2021

Healthy Plants: Q&A from Mr Booster

Dragon Fruit Magic Tricks

Q: I purchased two sweet red pitayas, that arrived and were planted on May 28, 2020, they were damaged but not serious. my question is this one pitaya is a beautiful green, and has grown 6or 8 "already, the other is bigger and is a grayish green and has not shown any sign of growth at all in six weeks, how long do I wait before I throw it out and buy another?

A: Being a cactus, sometimes Pitaya slows down its growth waiting for more favorable conditions. If one of your plants doesn't show any new growth, just give a it some more time and make sure the plant stays happy. To make pitaya happy, provide the following:
- Water. Unlike most cacti, Pitaya prefers regular watering (but not a wet soil). Make sure it is planted in well-drained media. Do not water again if soil remains moist, wait until it dries out on the surface. During hot weather, Pitaya enjoys light daily watering.
- Light. Unlike most cacti, Pitaya benefits from a filtered light especially while establishing. Try to create a temporary shade over the plant until it starts active growth (if grown in the ground), or move the pot in filtered light. Dull color or dry spots are signs of sun burn. Once the plant shows new growth, you may remove sun protection, or move the pot gradually into the full sun.
- Food. Pitayas are heavy feeders. Use the following fertilizer:
SUNSHINE C-Cibus - Crop Nutrition Booster

Q: I've been growing dragon fruit cuttings from Okinawa, Thailand and Vietnam for several years in pots and cannot get them to fruit. Any fertilizer suggestions? I live in Northern Virginia so I bring the massive pots in the garage under lights and a heater for the winter but back outside once the temperature warms up.

A: There is a little trick to get Dragon fruit to flowering and fruiting. This plant likes flowering when it is attached to a strong support. In commercial plantations, they use special trellises/frames made out of logs, but you can make one yourself using simple materials.
See article: Do-It-Yourself Support Structure for Dragon Fruit.
And of course, don't forget a special plant food for tropical fruit - Sunshine C-Cibus.
You can successfully get your Dragon fruits to fruit in pots, providing bright light in Summer. In Winter, keep the plants on a dry side to give them some rest and a chance to hibernate before the next fruiting season.

Date: 15 Oct 2020

Healthy Plants. Q&A from Mr Booster: Fertilizing Mango trees in Winter

Q: I'm living in Maryland growing zone 7A and would like some info on when to fertilize my potted mango trees. I ordered your Sunshine Mango Tango 2-2-4. All your mango trees are in pots.

A: You can start using this fertilizer right away, any time of the year, and every time you water your plants.
Sunshine Mango Tango, as well as other Sunshine boosters, is an amino-acid based liquid fertilizer that is scientifically developed for daily plant needs in all necessary nutrients. This means, you may use this fertilizer with every watering, including winter period.
Traditional fertilizers (both granulated and soluble, EDTA-chelated) can only be used during hot months while plants grow actively, and must be limited or not used at all during cooler months, to avoid nutrient lock up in soil (which basically means "building up unused elements"). With Liquid Sunshine Boosters, it is safe to add them every time you water your tree.
During cooler weather and when plant metabolism slows down, a tree will consume less water (as well as food), and you will automatically reduce watering, to keep over-wintering plants on a dry side. This means, less fertilizer too. This allows you to control elements intake naturally, like you control water amount just as much as the plant needs.

Date: 4 Oct 2020

New video: Ground orchids.
All-summer colors for shady gardens

WATCH NEW VIDEO

Did you know orchids can be grown in the ground?
Orchids have a mystique that seems to set them apart from most other flowers... they are elegant and almost unreal in their perfection... The symmetry of the flowers has led to the orchid being a symbol of a perfect beauty.
But not every gardener has luck growing traditional orchids. Some complain about their special maintenance: "Mount them on a tree, do not overwater... and all that hassle just for once-a-year flower?" Sounds familiar?
Terrestrial orchids (a.k.a. ground orchids) grow in regular garden soil instead of in the air on tree branches. And they bloom almost year round!...

Ground orchids are available from our store.

Stay updated with TopTropicals Videos by subscribing to our channel at YouTube.com/TopTropicals and get our latest video news of what is fruiting and blooming!

Remember to get plant food for your orchids and Ground orchids!
In the photo: Sunshine-Home, plant booster for tender house plants and orchids.

Date: 19 Apr 2026

Complete Adenium Care Guide: 9 tips how to keep it simple and thriving

Asdenium plants on the table with adenium soil mix and fertilizer

Asdenium plants on the table with adenium soil mix and fertilizer

🌸 Complete Adenium Care Guide: 9 tips how to keep it simple and thriving



Adeniums don’t need intense care - just the right balance.
Most problems come from too much water, not enough light, or the wrong soil.
  • 🌸 1. Soil is everything



    Why it matters
    Adeniums are succulents with thick roots and a caudex that stores water. They must never sit in wet, heavy soil.
    Most problems come from soil that stays wet too long - leading to root rot, soft caudex, weak growth, and poor flowering.
    Good soil builds strong roots, dries faster, supports a healthy caudex, and improves blooming.

    Ideal soil formula
    Use a very fast-draining, airy mix with perlite, bark, sand, coconut fiber. Avoid heavy peat-based mixes.
    A simple formula: TopTropicals Abundance potting mix + coarse sand (50/50). Use coarse sand (for construction), not fine beach sand. Sand improves drainage, structure, and aeration.
    You can also add lava rock and charcoal.

    Soil pH
    Adeniums prefer slightly alkaline soil. Too much peat (acidic) holds moisture and increases rot risk.
    Tip: add a few sea shells on top - watering slowly raises pH.

    Golden rule
    Better too fast-draining than too heavy.
    You can water more. You can’t fix rot.
  • 🌸 2. Containers



    Use shallow, unglazed clay pots. They dry faster, improve airflow, and stabilize the plant as the caudex gets heavy.
    Do not oversize - keep close to root ball.
    When repotting, raise the caudex slightly each time to develop that thick base.
  • 🌸 3. Light



    Give as much light as possible.
    Full sun is best, but in very hot climates, bright filtered light prevents leaf burn and helps flowers last longer.
    Too little light = weak growth and poor blooming.
  • 🌸 4. Watering



    Water deeply, then let soil dry out completely before watering again.
    Do not keep soil constantly wet. Adeniums prefer the dry side and hate sitting in moisture.
    In rainy climates, protect from excess water. Keep under cover - bright light, no constant soaking.
  • 🌸 5. Fertilizer



    Feed lightly and regularly during active growth.
    Use liquid fertilizer Sunshine Megafloк Bloom Booster on soil and lightly on leaves - avoid the caudex.
    Bloom boosters (high phosphorus) support flowers and caudex growth.
    Add controlled-release fertilizer (Green Magic) twice a year - spring and late summer. Do not fertilize during winter dormancy.
    Add microelements (iron, boron, molybdenum) - Sunshine Superfood supplement - for healthier leaves and longer blooms.
  • 🌸 6. Trimming (pruning)



    Trim after flowering, especially leggy branches.
    Pruning encourages branching - more branches = more flowers.
    Don’t be afraid to cut - it improves structure and blooming.
  • 🌸 7. Caudex development (secret trick)



    When repotting, raise the caudex slightly above soil level.
    Combined with regular feeding (bloom booster), this helps develop a thicker, more pronounced base.
  • 🌸 8. Seedlings vs grafted plants



    Seed-grown plants form a natural caudex but take 2-3 years to bloom and do not come true to type (often simple pink).
    Grafted plants combine a developed caudex with a known variety.
    Best choice for predictable, high-quality blooms.
  • 🌸 9. Troubleshooting



    If something goes wrong, check these first:

· Too much water
  • · Not enough light
  • · Soil too heavy
Fix these, and your plant will recover.

🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

📚 Learn more:

Adenium Plant Facts

Adenium sp.
Adenium, Desert Rose, Impala Lily
USDA Zone: 9-11
Plant with caudexLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunDry conditionsModerate waterYellow, orange flowersRed, crimson, vinous flowersUnusual colorBlue, lavender, purple flowersWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersToxic or Poisonous

#Container_Garden #Adeniums #How_to #Discover

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