Date: 10 Apr 2016
Growing by the sea
Q: Please recommend me some interesting plants that can grow on my waterfront property and can withstand some salt wind. All my neighbors have Sea Grape trees and bougainvilleas, and I want something different and special. I would love to have some colorful or fragrant flowers, or fruit around my paradise home.
Q: Considering your neighbors successfully grow Sea Grape (Coccoloba), and Bougainvilleas, you have a mild, frost free climate. There is a number of spectacular and useful tropical plants that are salt tolerant. Orchid Trees - Bauhinias, Poincettia - Delonix, and Geiger trees - Cordias, are very showy flowering trees. For large size bushes, try Dwarf Poincianas - Caesalpinias, and Scarlet-Coral Erythrinas. Frangipani - Plumeria, come in different colors and bring you perfume fragrance from Hawaii. And of course, Desert Roses - Adeniums, can be grown and showy specimens anywhere in your yard, both in the ground or as potted bonsai.
Most palms, especially popular Coconut Palm, source of tasty fruit and drink, are highly tolerant to salt breeze. If you are looking for something that nobody has, Lipstick palm, or Sealing wax palm - Cyrtostachys lakka, is definitely the most spectacular palm you can find. It is a stunning feather palm that develops a brilliantly red trunk. Palm is originally from Malaysia, but has been introduced to Costa Rica and other tropical areas of the world. Sealing Wax Palm seeds are very slow to germinate, up to a year, and large specimens are very rare and hard to find even in rare tropical plant nurseries. This palm will require a good overhead light, and constant warmth (above temperature 55F). It is definitely worth an effort to grow this beauty.
You may add more tropical accents to your landscape by the sea with many varieties of showy heliconias.
Date: 2 Apr 2026
Skip the Egg Hunt - Start a Plant Hunt 🐰

Smokey: Finally. You’re thinking.
Read more about Smokey & Sunshine
Groundhog said long winter… and it sure felt like it. But now it is finally over, and balconies and patios are waking up again.
Easter is here, and with it comes that fresh start feeling - time to open the doors, bring plants back out, and start growing.
We made it through the cold. For northern gardeners, that is every year; for borderline zones, it is a reminder that freezes happen. That is exactly why growing in pots makes sense - you stay flexible.
Container growing is not just about pots - it is about choosing the right plants. The best options stay manageable, produce well, and handle being moved.
Let's look at what works. Start with plants that naturally stay compact and adapt well to containers. These are the ones that won’t outgrow your space and will reward you quickly. These are proven performers in containers - compact, productive, and easy to manage:
- Dwarf Condo Mango for your patio
- Jaboticaba - source of Brazilian wine "Vinho Tinto de Jabuticaba"
- Tropical cherries - fast-fruting Eugenias
- Blackberry Jam Fruit and Peanut Butter Fruit - fun for kids and adults
- Fig Trees - compact and hardy
Simple rule: if it stays compact and handles pruning, it works in a container.
Skip the egg hunt this year - go on a plant hunt instead. Start with one or two plants this Easter - not ten. Get them established, learn how they grow, and then expand.
Container basics (keep it simple):
- Pot size: start with 3–7 gallon, upgrade as plant grows
- Soil: fast-draining mix (never heavy garden soil)
- Water: soak well, then let top inch dry
- Feeding: consistent light feeding works better than heavy doses
- Sun: most tropicals want full sun (6+ hours)