Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 26 Jan 2026

Why Turmeric was named the 2026 Herb of the Year

Turmeric - Curcuma

Turmeric - Curcuma

🌷 Why Turmeric was named the 2026 Herb of the Year

  • 🌷 Turmeric was named the 2026 Herb of the Year by the International Herb Association, and it is easy to see why gardeners are paying attention. This tropical plant from the ginger family is best known for its bright orange underground rhizomes, used for centuries as a spice, natural dye, and traditional remedy.
  • 🌷Native to India, Turmeric (Curcuma longa) is closely related to Ginger and Cardamom. Its rhizomes are a staple in curry and widely used in Asian, African, and Caribbean cuisines. In recent years, turmeric has also gained attention for potential anti-inflammatory properties.
  • 🌷 Herb, spice or flower?


  • • Botanically, turmeric is a spice, since it comes from the plant’s rhizomes rather than its leaves. In the kitchen, however, it often functions like an herb. Fresh turmeric can replace powdered turmeric in most recipes and delivers brighter flavor and color.
  • • Beyond edible Turmeric, there are many Curcuma hybrids grown purely for ornament. These selections produce striking, long-lasting flower spikes in shades of pink, white, orange, red, and purple, rising above lush tropical foliage. Ornamental curcumas are popular as patio plants and indoor accents, adding dramatic color and texture even where they are grown strictly in containers.


🌷 Growing turmeric anywhere - even in cool climates



Although Turmeric is a tropical perennial, it grows very well in containers, making it suitable for gardeners everywhere. When grown in pots, turmeric is treated as a warm-season plant that can be moved indoors as temperatures cool.
  • 🌷 How to grow Turmeric



    Turmeric is a compact, but bold plant, reaching 3-4 feet tall and wide, so it needs a roomy container. It prefers:

  • • Rich, well-drained soil
  • • Slightly acidic conditions (around pH 6–6.5)
  • • Consistent moisture
  • • Warm temperatures and bright, indirect light

The plant produces flowers that do not set seed, so turmeric is grown entirely from rhizomes.

🌷 Harvesting and using Turmeric



As the season ends, turmeric naturally goes dormant and the leaves yellow and dry. This signals harvest time. Dig the rhizomes, clean them, and dry them in a cool, shaded place.

Rhizomes can be:
  • • Boiled, dried, and ground into powder
  • • Frozen whole and grated as needed
  • • Pickled for long-term storage

Some healthy rhizomes can also be saved and replanted the following season, making turmeric both productive and renewable.

Compact, bold, and useful, turmeric proves that tropical plants can thrive well beyond the tropics - especially when grown in pots.

🛒 Plant Curcuma for both flowers, spice and herb

📚 Learn more :

Plant Facts

Boesenbergia rotunda, Curcuma rotunda
Chinese Keys, Fingerroot, Lesser Galangal, Chinese Ginger
USDA Zone: 9-11
Small plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeModerate waterRegular waterWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersEdible plantSpice or herb 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.
  • Turmeric (Curcuma) in Plant Encyclopedia
  • Curcuma - the tropical tulip with a secret spice twist
  • Curcuma: one plant, two powers - color and spice!
  • How Curcuma Turmeric keeps blood pressure in balance.
  • Turmeric Curcuma: Grow Your Own Brain Boosters
  • The most interesting edible gingers?

  • #Food_Forest #Container_Garden #Remedies #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 9 Mar 2026

    Dont Wait Years: 8 Fruit Plants You Can Harvest the Same Season

    Don't wait years for fruit! Harvest papayas, berries, figs, and more in the very same season you plant them with these fast-growing varieties.

    Don't wait years for fruit! Harvest papayas, berries, figs, and more in the very same season you plant them with these fast-growing varieties.

    Don't Wait Years: 8 Fruit Plants You Can Harvest the Same Season 🍒

    Growing fruit at home usually requires years of patience. Most gardeners view fruit trees as a long-term investment that may not pay off for a decade.
    But you don't have to wait.
    Certain tropical and subtropical plants are "fast-track" growers. In warm climates like Florida, choosing the right varieties means you can see flowers and fruit within months of planting - often in the very same season.
    If you want a backyard harvest without the wait, here are the fastest-producing fruits you can plant today.
    • 🍓 1. Blackberry Jam Fruit (Randia formosa)



      A compact shrub perfect for containers. It produces star-shaped flowers and dark purple fruit that tastes exactly like blackberry preserves. Established plants often fruit in their first season.
    • 🍓 2. Peanut Butter Fruit (Bunchosia)



      This fast-growing large shrub produces orange pulp with the uncanny flavor and texture of peanut butter. Expect flowers and bright red berries within months of planting in warm conditions.
    • 🍓 3. Papaya (Carica papaya)



      The "giant herb" of the fruit world. Papayas are legendary for their speed, often flowering just months after planting and providing sweet, vitamin-rich fruit within the same year.
    • 🍓 4. Grumichama Cherry (Eugenia brasiliensis)



      A stunning Brazilian evergreen. Grafted plants can fruit the same season they are planted, offering glossy, dark cherries with a sweet, mild finish.
    • 🍓 5. Black Surinam Cherry (Eugenia uniflora var. Lolita)



      The 'Lolita' cultivar is a game-changer. It grows quickly as an edible hedge and produces nearly black, resin-free fruit that is significantly sweeter than the common red varieties.
    • 🍓 6. Mysore Raspberry and Tropical Blackberries (Rubus sp.)



      Unlike traditional berries that require chill hours, these Rubus species thrive in the heat. Their vigorous canes grow rapidly, often fruiting the same season they hit the soil.
    • 🍓 7. Everbearing Mulberry (Morus sp.)



      Mulberries are incredibly generous. Everbearing varieties produce sweet berries over an extended window and often begin fruiting the very first year they are planted.
    • 🍓 8. Fig Trees (Ficus carica)



      Figs are the champions of container gardening. They are highly drought-tolerant and famous for setting honey-sweet fruit even at a very young age—often just months after being established.


    🏡 Where to plant them?
    • 👉 Tips for Faster Results


    • •  Start Large: Buy "nursery-established" plants rather than seeds.
    • •  Feed the Need: Use high-quality organic fertilizer to support rapid growth.
    • •  Sun is Fuel: Most of these varieties require at least 6-8 hours of direct sunlight to trigger flowering.


    🛒 Plant these fruits now - some can produce within months

    📷 Freshly picked tropical fruit bounty: don't wait years for fruit! Harvest papayas, berries, figs, and more in the very same season you plant them with these fast-growing varieties.

    #Food_forest #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 20 Sep 2025

    How to make lots of Insulin Ginger plants quickly and get more health benefits

    Costus igneus (Chamaecostus cuspidatus) - Fiery Costus or Spiral Flag

    💚 How to make lots of Insulin Ginger plants quickly and get more health benefits

    • Costus igneus (Chamaecostus cuspidatus) - Fiery Costus or Spiral Flag is believed to help lower blood glucose levels naturally and managing diabetes.
    • Have you heard of Insulin Ginger? Everyone wants to have it in the garden!
    • Gardeners in India grow it not just for its pretty spiral leaves, but for what those leaves do. People with diabetes often chew them fresh or brew them into tea, saying it helps keep their blood sugar under control.
    • Researchers have found something interesting: the leaves contain an insulin-like compound, along with antioxidants and anti-inflammatory properties. In animal studies, extracts from the plant lowered blood sugar, protected the liver and kidneys, and even made the body more sensitive to insulin.
    • The way folks use it is simple. You can chew a leaf right off the plant, steep dried leaves for tea, or find it in powders and capsules. It's one of those plants that shows how tradition and science sometimes meet in the garden.
    • Its lush, turmeric-like leaves spiral around upright stems, with a glossy dark green top and a striking light purple underside. In warm months, it produces bright orange, cone-like flowers that stand out beautifully in the garden.
    • Beyond its beauty and natural insulin effects, the insulin plant is credited with aiding digestion, reducing cholesterol, boosting energy, improving skin health, supporting weight loss, relieving stress, and promoting heart wellness. A real botanical multitasker!


    🎥 In this video, we’ll show you how to multiply Insulin Ginger fast, so you’ll have plenty of plants for yourself and even extras to share with friends and family.

    ✅ Don’t forget to use Green Magic fertilizer for the best results. Gingers absolutely love this plant food - they thrive on it and respond better than any other plant, with vigorous growth, lush foliage and loads of leaves you’ll need for all the benefits.

    🛒 Grow your own sugar-fighter - the Insulin Ginger

    📚 Learn more:


    #Food_Forest #Remedies #Shade_Garden #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 7 Oct 2025

    ⭐ The Winter Stars: 8 Flowering Trees That Steal the Show

    Collage  showing  eight  tropical  and  subtropical  winter-flowering  trees: 
 Royal  Poinciana  with  red-orange  canopy,  Dwarf  Pink  Tabebuia,  Dwarf  Golden 
 Tabebuia,  Pink  Butterfly  Orchid  Tree,  Golden  Rain  Tree,  Weeping  Red 
 Bottlebrush,  Hong  Kong  Orchid  Tree,  and  Jacaranda  with  purple 
 flowers.

    8 Best Flowering Trees That Bloom in Winter: Royal Poinciana with red-orange canopy, Dwarf Pink Tabebuia, Dwarf Golden Tabebuia, Pink Butterfly Orchid Tree, Golden Rain Tree, Weeping Red Bottlebrush, Hong Kong Orchid Tree, and Jacaranda with purple flowers.

    Royal Poinciana (Delonix regia)

    The diva of tropical trees. Huge red-orange flowers blanket the branches from late winter through summer. If you’ve ever seen one in full bloom, you know — it stops traffic. Best in large yards or open spaces, but young ones do great in big pots for a few years. 🛒 Shop
    Tatiana: “If you want a tree that makes people say ‘wow,’ this is it.”

    Tabebuia chrysotricha – Dwarf Golden Tabebuia

    Small tree, big drama. It turns solid gold just before new leaves appear. Blooms while completely bare — a stunning contrast of yellow on brown wood. Perfect for patios, courtyards, and containers. Handles cool nights down to the mid-20s F. Bright, cheerful, and forgiving — the kind of tree that always looks like it’s celebrating. 🛒 Shop

    Tabebuia impetiginosa – Dwarf Pink Tabebuia (Pau D’Arco)

    The Florida “cherry blossom.” Pink-lavender flowers smother the branches each winter, often before any leaves return. Thrives in sandy soil, tolerates drought, and grows beautifully in large planters or pots indoors near a sunny window. Ideal for seasonal residents or anyone who wants color when everything else is asleep. 🛒 Shop

    Jacaranda mimosifolia

    If color had music, this would be jazz. Soft, fern-like leaves and cascades of violet-blue trumpet flowers — airy, elegant, unforgettable. Outdoors, it makes a graceful shade tree; in containers, it stays compact with regular pruning. Jacarandas reward patience — they bloom bigger each year. 🛒 Shop

    Koelreuteria paniculata – Golden Rain Tree

    A favorite for its surprises — golden blooms in summer, pink paper lantern pods in fall, and bronze leaves before rest. Fast-growing, tough, and easy. Loves full sun and moderate water. Great for open lawns or patio tubs. The kind of tree that gives you something new to look at every month. 🛒 Shop

    Callistemon citrinus – Bottlebrush Tree

    The hummingbird magnet. Bright red, brush-shaped flowers bloom several times a year — sometimes even in cool weather. The dwarf form, ‘Little John,’ stays about 4 feet tall, perfect for pots or small borders. Trim lightly after flowering to keep it compact and colorful. 🛒 Shop
    Tatiana: “If you’ve never grown a tropical tree before — start here. It’s the friendliest one.”

    Bauhinia variegata – Pink Butterfly Tree

    Graceful, fragrant, and forgiving. Its pink-lavender orchid-like flowers open from late winter through spring, filling the garden with color and pollinators. It’s fast-growing, drought-tolerant, and excellent for both ground and pots. Even the buds are edible — a fun bonus for adventurous gardeners. 🛒 Shop

    Bauhinia blakeana – Hong Kong Orchid Tree

    The queen of them all. Huge magenta-purple blooms that last for months, from fall through spring. Fragrant, clean (no messy seed pods), and perfect for patios or large decorative containers. Give it sun, a little water, and it will reward you with bloom after bloom. 🛒 Shop
    Tatiana: “It’s the one tree that never lets winter win.”

    A note on grafted Hong Kong Orchid Trees: Most Hong Kong Orchid Trees are grafted, and that’s actually a big advantage. Because they don’t grow from seed, grafted plants mature faster and begin blooming while still small — sometimes within the first year. That makes them perfect for patio pots or small gardens where space is limited.

    Bringing the Tropics Home

    Whether your garden faces the Gulf or your window faces the snow, these trees let you live in color year-round. Plant them outdoors in warm zones or grow them in pots indoors — they adapt, they bloom, they brighten every corner.

    Gardening isn’t about waiting for spring — it’s about finding joy in every season. And when a tree blooms in January, that joy feels twice as sweet.

    🛒 Shop Winter Flowering Plants

    Tabebuia  impetiginosa  -  Dwarf  Pink  Tabebuia,  Pau  DArco,  Taheebo

    ✍️ Winter Bloomer Q&A

    Q: Can these trees really bloom indoors?

    Yes! Smaller species like Bottlebrush ‘Little John,’ Dwarf Tabebuias, and many Bauhinias bloom beautifully in pots with bright light or grow lamps.

    Q: Do they lose their leaves in winter?

    Some, like Tabebuias and Jacarandas, drop leaves right before blooming — it’s normal and part of their charm. Others, like Bottlebrush, stay evergreen.

    Q: What fertilizer works best?

    We use Sunshine Boosters — gentle, balanced, and perfect for tropicals. Feed every 2–3 weeks during active growth.

    Q: How do I know when to water?

    Touch the soil! If it’s dry an inch or two down, water deeply. Overwatering is the main mistake with tropicals.

    Q: Can they handle frost?

    A quick dip into the upper 20s F is fine for most mature trees. Cover young ones or move containers under shelter if colder.

    Q: Which are best for beginners?

    Start with Bottlebrush ‘Little John’ or Golden Tabebuia — compact, colorful, and nearly foolproof.

    Q: When will they bloom?

    Usually within few years if they get enough sun and warmth. Grafted plants blooms much sooner

    Q: Which of these trees are best for pot growing?

    For patios, balconies, or indoor sunrooms, choose the compact or grafted types:

    🎥 Watch videos of Dwarf trees in bloom:

    Dwarf Golden Tabebuia

    Dwarf Pink Tabebuia

    🛒 Shop Winter Flowering Plants

    Date: 6 Jul 2024

    How productive is Tamarind

    How productive is Tamarind
    ⚡️ How productive is Tamarind - for previous post 👆

    Tamarind tree (Tamarindus indica) can live for over 200 years and produce both edible fruit and valuable timber.

    #Food_Forest #Fun_Facts

    🏵 TopTropicals