Date: 8 Nov 2025
It smells like bananas but its a magnolia!
Magnolia figo, Banana Magnolia
🛒 Plant Banana Magnolia
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Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Date: 8 Nov 2025
Magnolia figo, Banana Magnolia
Date: 14 Dec 2025
Date: 6 Feb 2026
If you already know what feels right, choose the plant now. Sweetheart Hoya is a favorite for a reason, and there are other Valentine plants to explore if you want options.
A good choice when you feel confident, love plants, or are gifting something meant to live indoors.
If timing, weather, or choice feels uncertain, a Gift Card keeps the moment simple. Your Valentine can choose the perfect plant when the time is right.
Especially helpful for gardeners up north, or when you want the gift to unfold later.
We ship live plants with care and pay close attention to weather along the way. If conditions are not right, we may hold a shipment briefly to keep plants safe.
If timing or weather makes you hesitate, a Gift Card is an easy way to give a Valentine gift now and choose the plant later, when conditions are perfect.
Date: 15 Dec 2025

In Part 1 (Winter Survival Guide: Temperature) we covered the foundation: light, placement, and acclimation. That is the survival layer.
Part 2 (Winter Survival Guide: Temperature) is about what quietly ruins plants indoors in winter. Not overnight. Slowly.
Most winter losses come from good intentions and habits that worked fine outdoors or in summer, but fail indoors when growth slows.
If there is one winter skill that matters more than anything else, it is knowing when not to water.
In winter, light is weaker, temperatures are lower, roots stay cold longer, and growth slows or stops. Plants simply do not drink the way they do in summer.
Do not water on a schedule. Winter does not care about your calendar.
Instead:
Before watering, test the soil with your finger. Water only when the top inch or so is dry.
If the soil below still feels cool and damp, do nothing. That is the hardest skill to learn.
Remember what we covered in Part 1: in winter, soil and roots stay cold much longer. Cold roots absorb water very slowly. Wet, cold soil is not helpful moisture. It is stress.
Waiting is often the correct move.
Always check below the surface. If the pot feels cold and heavy, roots are not asking for water yet.
As a rough guideline, most indoor tropicals need 25 to 50 percent less water than summer, sometimes even less in low light.
Always use room temperature water. Cold water shocks roots and slows recovery.
Winter indoor air is dry. Often far drier than people realize.
Heating systems pull moisture out of the air, and many homes sit at 20 to 30 percent humidity all winter. Most tropical plants prefer something closer to 50 to 60 percent.
Low humidity rarely kills plants outright. It weakens them first. That is why pests show up more often in winter. The plant is already stressed before insects arrive.
Humidity works best when plants are grouped. One isolated plant in dry air struggles far more than a group sharing moisture.
Misting leaves feels helpful, but it only raises humidity for minutes. It does not fix dry air.
Winter light is already weak. Dust makes it worse.
Dusty leaves block light, clog stomata, and create hiding places for pests.
Wiping leaves is one of the simplest winter care steps, and one of the most ignored.
Gently wipe. No scrubbing. Every few weeks is enough.
Plants with fuzzy leaves, like African violets, should only be brushed gently with a dry brush.
Clean leaves also make problems easier to see. You will spot mites, scale, or damage early instead of discovering it weeks later.
Winter is not the season to be surprised.
Soil that works outdoors often behaves badly indoors. No wind, lower evaporation, and cooler roots mean the same soil stays wet far longer than expected.
In winter, roots care more about oxygen than water. Soil that stays wet pushes oxygen out, even if the plant looks fine above the soil line.
This is why rot often appears suddenly in late winter, not right after watering mistakes.
Large pots dry slowly. Slow drying plus cool soil equals rot.
If a plant is barely growing, a very large pot is not doing it any favors.
Winter is not the time to repot unless you must.
Only repot if:
Repotting in winter slows recovery and often makes things worse.
Indoor winter air is still. Still air leads to mold, fungus, and spider mites.
Airflow is not about cooling plants. It is about breaking stagnant air layers that pests and fungus love.
A small fan on low, not blowing directly on plants, makes a big difference. Even gentle movement helps more than people expect.
Never let pots sit in water.
Standing water causes root rot, fungus gnats, and mold smell. Always empty trays after watering.
Raise pots slightly so air can move underneath. It helps more than people expect.
If you smell sour soil or a musty odor, something is staying wet too long. That smell is an early warning, not a minor issue.
This is where a lot of winter damage happens.
If a plant is not actively growing, fertilizer does not help. It hurts.
In winter, most indoor tropicals are in maintenance mode, not growth mode. Feeding during this time leads to salt buildup, root burn, and weak, floppy growth.
Green leaves do not mean the plant is growing. They often just mean the plant has not given up yet.
Growth shows up as new leaves, longer stems, or expanding roots. No growth means no feeding.
Only if all of these are true:
Even then, feed lightly and less often than summer.
Spring will come. You do not need to force it.
My soil stays wet forever.
Too little light, too cold, or pot too large. Water less.
Leaves are crispy but soil is wet.
Low humidity combined with overwatering.
Should I mist every day?
No. Fix the air, not the leaves.
Can I fertilize just a little?
Only if the plant is clearly growing.
Why do I suddenly have fungus gnats?
Wet soil indoors is the invitation.
My plant looks fine but has not grown in months. Is that bad?
No. Stability is success in winter.
Date: 15 Jan 2026
Every so often a plant blooms and the whole greenhouse seems to slow down.
That is what happened this week with the Black Bat Lily, Tacca chantrieri. We have grown Taccas for years, but when the black ones open properly, it still feels special. The flowers are dark and quiet, almost unreal up close. They do not shout for attention. They make you lean in.
Right now, we have a lot of them blooming at the same time. If you have never seen one in person, photos only get you part of the way there. The wings are darker than you expect, and the whiskers seem to go on forever. People walk into the greenhouse, stop, stare, and usually ask the same question: "Is that real?" - Yes. It is.
A quick honest note, because this matters. The blooms themselves are delicate and may not travel well. That is just the nature of this plant. The plants, however, are strong, well established. With the right conditions, they bloom again. This is not a one-time trick.
Black Tacca is not a beginner houseplant, but it is also not impossible. It likes filtered light, steady warmth, and humidity. It does especially well in a greenhouse or a bright indoor spot where you already keep plants that enjoy moisture. It is the kind of plant you keep close, not one you forget in the corner.
We are offering them now simply because they are ready and looking their best. If you have been waiting for one, this is a good moment.
You can see the Black Bat Lily here: https://toptropicals.com/store/item/2345.htm
Just wanted to share something we are enjoying in the greenhouse right now. Some plants come and go. Some stay with you.
Tacca, also known as Bat Lily or Devil Flower, is a tropical plant grown for its unusual bat-shaped flowers with long whisker-like filaments. The most popular species is Tacca chantrieri, the Black Bat Lily.
Tacca is not a beginner plant, but it is not impossible. It does best with warmth, humidity, and filtered light. Gardeners who already grow orchids, calatheas, or other humidity-loving plants usually do well with Tacca.
A greenhouse is ideal, but not required. Tacca can be grown indoors in a bright spot with indirect light and good humidity, such as near a humidifier or in a bright bathroom with a window or skylight.
Plants may be blooming in the greenhouse, but flowers are often removed before shipping because they are delicate and do not travel well. The plants are well established and capable of blooming again with proper care.
Tacca does not bloom constantly. It may take time to establish before flowering, but once settled, it can bloom seasonally and may produce multiple flowers in warm, humid conditions.
Tacca grows from a rhizome, not a bulb. The rhizome stores energy and allows the plant to regrow and bloom again.
The long filaments are thought to help attract pollinators such as flies by mimicking the look of decaying organic matter. While unusual, this is part of the plant's natural pollination strategy.
✍️ More about growing Tacca