These are not seedlings — they’re grafted trees, which means
you get the true variety with known flavor, quality, and performance. Large
grafted trees give you a real head start:
Already mature with a strong root system.
Handle transplanting and weather shifts with ease.
Can bloom and fruit in the first or second season.
No space for a full orchard? You can still grow your own tropical
paradise!
Our large grafted Condo Mango
trees adapt beautifully to big containers on patios,
balconies, and sunrooms. They stay compact, flower sooner, and can fruit
even in
pots when given good light and warmth. 👉 Learn more: What are the Condo Mangos?
Bring the tropics indoors — move your tree outside for summer sun,
then back inside before frost. It’s the perfect way to enjoy homegrown
fruit wherever you live.
Give your garden a smart start this season. Large grafted Mango trees
are ready — but only for a short time before winter.
👉 Plant now, harvest sooner, and enjoy the true
variety!
Plant Care Tips by Top Tropicals Plant
Expert Tatiana Anderson
Large grafted Mango trees are easy to establish.
Soil: Well-drained, rich mix — avoid heavy clay.
Water: Deeply once or twice a week after the tree is established; keep soil
evenly moist during the first few weeks after planting.
Light: Full sun or bright patio spot.
Feeding: Use balanced fertilizer Sunshine
Boosters Mango Tango with every watering and Green
Magic controlled release fertilizer every 6 months for steady
growth.
Protection: Cover on cold nights for the first winter.
Plant once, care lightly, and your tree will reward you with fast growth
and early fruit.
🌳
Big Trees, Local Pickup Only
For our local gardeners, we have something special. Extra-large 15- and
25-gallon Mango trees. These are full, mature specimens that simply
can’t be shipped, but they’re perfect for local pickup or
delivery.
Instant Impact and Faster Fruit
These trees already have strong trunks, big root systems, and start
blooming next Spring. Plant one in your yard and it instantly looks like
it’s been there for years.
Delivery and Installation
We offer local delivery and professional installation for large
trees in the nearby area. Our team can bring the tree to your garden,
position
it correctly, and help with planting and setup.
Limited Availability: Quantities are small, and these big trees
go fast — once sold, they won’t be available again until next
growing season.
"Large grafted trees give you a head start — they’re stronger,
settle in faster, and can reward you with fruit the very next season," says
Tatiana Anderson
Orchids have a mystique that sets them apart — elegant, exotic,
almost unreal in their perfection. But let’s be honest, not everyone
has
luck with the fancy ones that cling to trees or need greenhouse tricks.
Ground orchids are different. They grow in regular garden soil, bloom in
sun or shade, and come in all sorts of shapes and colors. They’re the
orchids you don’t have to fuss over.
Nun Orchid
(Phaius tankervilleae) – Ever wonder why it’s called the
Nun
Orchid? The flowers really do look like the white veil and brown habit nuns
used to wear. The plants send up spikes 3–4 ft tall with 10–20
fragrant blooms that open one after another for weeks. I like them best
tucked
under trees where they just keep spreading year after year.
Spathoglottis – The nonstop bloomer – If you want flowers
that
just don’t quit, this one’s it. Spathoglottis clumps up and
throws
spikes of purple, pink, or yellow that last for weeks, then keep coming back
through the summer. In warm spots they’ll bloom almost year-round.
Honestly, it’s one of the easiest orchids you’ll ever grow.
💲
Special Offer – 20% off Ground Orchids!
Get 20% OFF ground orchids with code
ORCHID2025
Min order $100. Excluding S/H, valid online only,
cannot be combined with other offers.
7 best exotic dwarf trees for maximum impact in small tropical landscapes 🏡
For a yard that feels like a tropical escape but doesn't have the space for a massive jungle, these seven selections from TopTropicals are game-changers, chosen for their compact size, high "curb appeal," and unique tropical flair.
1. Dwarf Pink Princess Silk Floss Tree (Ceiba hybrid)
🌳 A spectacular grafted hybrid of the famous Silk Floss tree, but in a much smaller package: a unique, often "fat" or bottle-shaped trunk and large, showy pink flowers with white centers. 🏡 Unlike the standard Ceiba which can become a giant, the 'Pink Princess' is grafted to stay compact (usually under 10 - 12 feet), allowing you to enjoy those exotic, orchid-like blooms even in a tiny garden.
Ceiba Plant Facts
Botanical name: Ceiba sp. Also known as: Ceiba, Floss Silk Tree, Kapok Tree
🌳 Known as the "Golden Trumpet Tree," this dwarf selection puts on one of the most brilliant displays in the plant kingdom. Before the leaves emerge in spring, the entire tree is covered in bright, trumpet-shaped yellow flowers. 🏡 This specific dwarf form stays much smaller and more manageable than the standard Tabebuias seen on city streets. Its silver-green foliage and rounded canopy make it an ideal "specimen" tree that acts as a focal point for your front yard.
Dwarf Golden Tabebuia Plant Facts
Botanical name: Handroanthus chrysotrichus, Tabebuia chrysotricha, Tabebuia chrysantha Also known as: Dwarf Golden Tabebuia
3. Little Gem Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora)
🌳 All the elegance of a classic Southern Magnolia but in a miniaturized version. It has the iconic waxy white, lemon-scented flowers and glossy leaves with fuzzy bronze undersides. 🏡 'Little Gem' is narrow and columnar, typically reaching only 15-20 feet (half the size of the standard species). It starts blooming at a very young age, so you don't have to wait years for those famous fragrant flowers.
Southern Magnolia Plant Facts
Botanical name: Magnolia grandiflora Also known as: Southern Magnolia, Bull Bay
🌳 This "ever-blooming" small tree is a butterfly magnet. It features clusters of bright, cherry-red star flowers against glossy, fiddle-shaped leaves. 🏡 The Compacta variety is specifically bred to stay bushy and small. It blooms almost 365 days a year in warm climates, providing a constant splash of red that draws in hummingbirds and pollinators.
Peregrina Plant Facts
Botanical name: Jatropha integerrima, Jatropha pandurata Also known as: Peregrina, Spicy Jatropha, Coral Plant, Physic Nut
🌳 Known as the "Wood of Life," this is one of the slowest-growing trees in the world. It has fine-textured, dark green foliage and produce stunning, small blue flowers that fade to white, followed by bright orange seed pods. 🏡 Because it grows so slowly, it will never outgrow its space. It is extremely hardy, salt-tolerant, and hurricane-resistant, making it a "plant it and forget it" heirloom tree for coastal or small urban lots.
Lignum Vitae Plant Facts
Botanical name: Guaiacum sanctum Also known as: Lignum Vitae, Tree of Life, Gaiac tree
🌳 A visual firework display. The leaves are deep green on top and rich purple underneath. In late winter, it produces massive, 8-inch wide clusters of tubular pink-and-white flowers that look like an exploding star. 🏡 It is easily pruned to a single-trunk tree form. The purple foliage provides "curb appeal" year-round, while the winter blooms provide a much-needed pop of color when other plants are dormant.
Winter Starburst Plant Facts
Botanical name: Clerodendrum quadriloculare Also known as: Winter Starburst, Fireworks, Clerodendron
🌳 This is a rare, small evergreen tree with glossy, dark green leaves and clusters of highly fragrant, star-shaped white flowers with a red "eye." 🏡 It has an naturally architectural, upright habit. The fragrance is incredible - sweet and heavy - making it a perfect "sensory" tree to plant near a patio where you can enjoy the scent on summer evenings.
👉 more
Sunshine: Look what I can do. It all started with
plumerias. Aloha, backyard edition.
Smokey: You are not just planting a tree - you are building
a tropical island lifestyle around it. Not bad for
staying home.
It usually starts simple. A plumeria in a pot by the patio. The flowers
catch your eye first, then the scent follows you,
soft but unmistakable. And that scent does something strange - it brings
back places you have been, or places you wish you had. Warm evenings, ocean
air,
tropical vacations that stay with you long after they are over.
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
That is the part people do not expect. One plant changes how the space
feels. But
adding a few changes everything. Different colors, slightly different
fragrances, layers that build on each other. It stops being a plant and
becomes an atmosphere that
pulls you outside without thinking.
Plumeria carries that tropical world with it. The same feeling people travel
for can live
right outside your door. Mix a few varieties, and your backyard starts
feeling like a place you never want to leave.
Plumerias are one of those plants you don't just grow
- you start collecting. One turns into two, then five, then suddenly you
want them
all!
Plumerias are one of those plants that instantly feel like a vacation - soft, fragrant flowers, warm colors, and that unmistakable tropical look. Known as a symbol of Hawaii and the Aloha spirit, they’re loved for their scent, their beauty, and how effortlessly they turn any space into something special. And the best part - their colors feel almost endless, from soft pastels to rich, glowing tropical tones, even into rainbow-like multicolor blooms.
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
💡 How to Grow a Blooming Plumeria?
Plumerias are surprisingly easy to grow - once you follow a few simple rules, they almost take care of themselves. Give them sun, fast-draining soil, and don’t overwater, and they’ll reward you with strong growth and fragrant blooms.
In #PlumeriaRainbow series, we’ll share simple tips to keep them happy, healthy, and blooming - bringing that perfumed tropical Aloha right into your garden.
🌸 Today's featured plumerias
✦ Plumeria Granny - a full, eye-catching variety with rich pink blooms ranging from soft blush to deeper rosy tones, often mixed within the same cluster. Petals are smooth and slightly overlapping, giving flowers a rounded, softly layered look. It blooms in dense clusters, creating a lush, full appearance that stands out from a distance while still showing nice detail up close.
✦ Plumeria Som Paruay - a bright, cheerful "Rainbow" variety with golden-yellow centers blending into orange, coral, and rosy pink edges. The smooth color gradient gives each flower a warm, glowing look. Clusters are vibrant and lively, adding strong tropical color. The name comes from Thai - Som means orange, Paruay refers to prosperity and good fortune.
✦ Plumeria Yellow Maha - a striking variety with extra-long petals in bright yellow, cleanly outlined in white. The shape alone makes it stand out. It is also super aromatic - yellow varieties are the most fragrant, filling the air with a strong, sweet scent.
✦ Plumeria Moung Jack (Jacque) - a softer, more unusual variety with lavender-pink tones and a warm yellow-orange center. The color is smooth and slightly muted, giving it a calm, pastel look. Petals are broad and rounded, forming a classic shape with a velvety feel. Moung means purple in Thai, referring to its gentle lavender tones.