Date: 4 Jun 2016
Desert rose winter care
Q: I purchased several packets of desert rose seeds last year. I now have 45 very healthy seedlings some of them in bud. Almost all of my seeds grew but I lost most of them when I rook them in during winter. I did not water them for a month , kept them in their pots and set them by the window. they either dried up and died or rotted and died. I noticed when you send me grafted specimens that you bareroot them. Is this a better way to keep them inside in winter, bareroot? I hate to lose these plants come winter time. Pls advise me. I live in Houston, Tx. where we get temps below 40 degrees and sometime a day or more of freezing temps.
A: Thank you for your question. Rot is pretty common problem with Desert Roses. We monitor our Adeniums closely and have a special set up of watering environment and schedule, in dedicated greenhouses just for them. Nevertheless - every now and then we see a rotten caudex and can't help it to say "oops! over-watered!" These plants are very sensitive to environment changes, especially when it comes to a combination of water and temperature. These are a few tips that should help you to reduce risk of plant loss to a minimum:
1) Use only well drained mix with much higher content of perlite than you would use for most tropical plants. For adeniums, we use mix with 30-40% of perlite in it, while regular mix has 10-15%.
2) Adeniums like alkaline soil, unlike most of tropical plants (hard to say what else likes alkaline... Ficus for sure!). This means, regular mix with high content of peat moss may cause root rot. To increase alkalinity, you may add dolomite. Here in Florida where we have natural supply of shell rock handy, it is easy to add some shell to a potting mix (shell sand, rather than quartz sand). We always add a few large shells on top of a pots with a big specimen. Besides increasing soil pH (making it more alkaline), shells look very decorative.
3) Water very carefully during cooler months. When it is hot (85-100F), excessive water usually won't harm adeniums: it will be partially used by a plant, and partially will evaporate. Especially be careful with water when temperatures drop below 65F - then tropical plants simply stop growing process and go dormant. Once adeniums start losing leaves, this is a sign to reduce watering to once a week to once a month, and in very small quantity (couple tablespoons per pot).
4) We do not bareroot adeniums for winter storage. They are not bulbs. Barerooting of this plant is recommended only during shipping. Adeniums can stay without soil for up to a week without hardly any stress, sometimes even longer.
5) We keep our big collection specimens on a roofed porch during winter, where level of light is very low. Last winter we haven't lost a single plant due to low light. They take shade pretty well considering minimum or no water. However bright light is always better - it creates healthier environment for a plant. We all know about space limitations for our large collections, especially in winter. So if you can afford a bright spot for adenium during winter - the plant will be lucky!
Date: 9 Aug 2021
Care of Desert Roses
Q: I am looking forward to my three desert roses I just ordered from you and I am wondering how to take care of them, especially during winter time. Should I put the pots in full sun or shade? What kind of soil do they like? How often should I water them? When it gets cooler, should I bring them inside? We do have occasional frost here during winter.
A: Here are a few tips for your desert roses:
1. When received Adenium from mail-order, unpack carefully; branches are fragile. Plant in well-drained potting mix. Cactus mix will do, but we recommend special Adenium mix. If using regular acidic peat-based potting mix, you may add sea-shells on top of soil to neutralize acidity: adeniums prefer alkaline soils. Using clay pots is beneficial. Water once and do not water again until soil gets dry. Place in bright shade until new leaves sprout, then the plant can be moved to full sun.
2. Adenium is a succulent, but not a cactus. It needs watering, however let soil dry before waterings. Reduce watering during cool season and discontinue when plant gets dormant (drops all leaves in winter).
3. Bright light is the best for profuse flowering. However, adeniums look much healthier in slightly filtered light rather than in all-day full sun.
4. Fertilize and spray leaves with liquid fertilizer SUNSHINE Megaflor - Nutrition Bloom Booster. Phosphorous is responsible both for flowering and caudex development. Avoid caudex, spray over foliage only. Dry fertilizer can be used only during hot months.
5. Watch for spider mites during hot and dry season.
6. Give plants a break during winter dormant season. Keep in bright shade and reduce watering to 1-2 per month or stop watering if temperature is below 65F.
More info on growing Desert Roses:
What you need for successful growing Adeniums
Overwintering Adeniums outside of tropics
Growing Exotic Adeniums - Growing Exotic Adeniums
Date: 21 Apr 2025
The First Video of Exotic Adenium Hybrids!
Exotic Adenium Hybrids
- 🌸
· Easy to grow indoors or out
- · Thrive in sun, shade, and low humidity
- · Drought-tolerant, low maintenance
- · Not picky about soil
- · Stunning blooms and unique caudex shapes
- 🌸 How Many Varieties Exist?
· Over 200 hybrids at Top Tropicals
- · 100+ varieties in stock now
- · From doubles to red, purple, yellow, striped, dotted, rainbow, even black flowers - you'll want them all!
🌸 How to Grow a Big, Swollen Caudex
Each time you repot, raise the plant slightly to expose more of the upper roots. This encourages new root growth downward and helps form a thicker, more dramatic caudex.
- · Use a well-draining mix
- · Water only when dry - Adeniums love dry conditions
- · Feed with Sunshine Megaflor Booster that supports both caudex and blooms
- · Grow best in filtered bright light
👍 A simple trick with big results!
📚 More about Adeniums:
- • Why Adeniums are the most popular container plants
- • How to grow a happy Adenium
- • What is the easiest container plant with beautiful flowers
- • Multi-grafted Adenium with different colors of flowers on the same plant
- • What you need for successful growing Adeniums
🛒 Shop Adenium colors and hybrids
#Container_Garden #How_to #Shade_Garden #Adenium
🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 20 Jun 2025
Adenium Rainbow, Part 1
Adenium varieties
To be continued, check back soon!⤵️
🌸 Why Collect Adeniums?
· Easy to grow indoors or out
- · Thrive in sun, shade, and low humidity
- · Drought-tolerant, low maintenance
- · Not picky about soil
- · Stunning blooms and unique caudex shapes
- 🌸 How Many Varieties Exist?
· Over 200 hybrids at Top Tropicals
- · 100+ varieties in stock now
- · From doubles to red, purple, yellow, striped, dotted, rainbow, even black flowers - you'll want them all!
🌸 How to Grow a Big, Swollen Caudex - a simple trick with big results:
Each time you repot, raise the plant slightly to expose more of the upper roots. This encourages new root growth downward and helps form a thicker, more dramatic caudex.
- · Use a well-draining mix
- · Water only when dry - Adeniums love dry conditions
- · Feed with Sunshine Megaflor Booster that supports both caudex and blooms
- · Grow best in filtered bright light
📚 More about Adeniums:
- • More posts about #Adenium
- • The First Video of Exotic Adenium Hybrids
- • Why Adeniums are the most popular container plants
- • How to grow a happy Adenium
- • What is the easiest container plant with beautiful flowers
- • Multi-grafted Adenium with different colors of flowers on the same plant
- • What you need for successful growing Adeniums
🛒 Shop Adenium colors and hybrids
#Container_Garden #How_to #Shade_Garden #Adenium
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 24 Aug 2025
🌸 Exotic Adeniums Hot Deal
Colorful adenium hybrids in bloom at Top Tropicals
Desert roses (Adeniums) are not really roses at all. They are cousins of the plumeria, but gardeners prize them for that swollen base more than for the leaves. Want a little trick? Each time you repot, lift the plant slightly so the crown roots peek above the soil. Over time the base swells into odd shapes. Some look like bottles, others like bonsai elephants. That is half the fun of growing them.
At Top Tropicals we only sell grafted plants. Why? Because seed-grown plants do not keep flower color true, but they are the only ones that form the swollen caudex. With grafting you get the best of both worlds: reliable flower colors from named hybrids and the sculptural trunk from seedling rootstock. You can make hundreds of exotic colors. Tempting, isn’t it? Take advantage of this hot sale offer and and collect them all!
Use the code below to save 15% on any adenium:
ADENIUM15
No min order. Exp. 8-31-25
Read Garden Blog about Adeniums


